Monday, March 5, 2012

BITUMEN-RUBBER

An experimental pavement bound with a bitumen-rubber mixture was laid in Holland in 1929. The first use of this binder in the United States was made in 1947 when a section was laid Akren, Ohio. The pavement was conventional, except that finely divided rubber amounting to 5 – 7.5 % of the bitumen by weight was included since that time experimental roads have been laid by (among others) the state highway departments of Virginia, Ohio, Texas, Massachusetts, California, Colorado, and Utah the cities of New York and Baltimore and the great Britain. In addition, bituminous binders modified with rubber have used for seal coats.

Certain advantages are attributed to rubber additives. For example, skid tests in Virginia, reported in 1950, showed very little improvement in coefficients of friction on newly laid pavements but considerable advantage after six months early test by the Bureau of public roads indicated both favorable and unfavorable results. Rubber added in powdered form brought unfavorable consequence, when preblended with the asphalt, it improved the stability of some but not all laboratory specimens. Recently, greater elasticity reduces temperature susceptibility and brittleness and longer life in the pavement have been claimed. In sum however the conclusions of a 1954 analysis by the Bureau of public roads still appears to be valid. It stands than an appraisal of the real economic value of the addition of rubber to asphalt must wait on further observation of the behavior of experimental pavements under the influence of age, weather and traffic.

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