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Recycled roads demonstrated at sites across Victoria

Recycled roads demonstrated at sites across Victoria

RMIT University is leading a project to deliver new roads mixed with recycled plastics at ten sites across Victoria.

Supported by the Australian Research Council, Austroads and 10 Victorian councils, the RMIT University-led project will incorporate recycled plastic from consumer and industrial waste, including soft plastics, into asphalt as a performance enhancer.

Project lead, RMIT’s Associate Professor Filippo Giustozzi, said the team will also produce best-practice guidelines on the use of recycled plastics in asphalt roads.

“These guidelines will enable local governments, which control 80 per cent of the nation’s roads, to begin widescale adoption of this innovative recycling solution,” said Giustozzi from RMIT’s School of Engineering.

The City of Melbourne and nine suburban and regional councils – Banyule, Bayside, Moonee Valley, Hobsons Bay, Baw Baw, Latrobe, Casey, Mornington Peninsula and Wyndham – will each have sections of recycled road up to 900 metres long paved over coming months.

The 10 project sites will use an estimated 21,000 kilograms of recycled plastic, but the potential scale of this solution is considerable given the several hundred thousand kilometres of roads across Australia, Giustozzi said.

“If Australia’s 537 local governments each used a small amount of recycled plastic in the many roads they resurface each year, then nationally we’ll have created a large end-market for recycled plastic,” Giustozzi added.

New roads built on research

Extensive laboratory studies conducted by RMIT for Austroads – the collective of the Australian and New Zealand transport agencies – show these mixes are mechanically, chemically, and environmentally sound, he said.

“The performance of roads can actually be improved with the additions of recycled material, such as plastic and rubber, to be more durable against traffic and resistant against ageing,” Giustozzi said.

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The team’s latest study, funded by Austroads and published in the journal Science of The Total Environment, found the recycled plastic asphalt mixtures had 150 per cent less cracking and 85 per cent less deformation under pressure testing than conventional asphalt.

“These studies tell us that adding specific types of plastic in the right way can generate greater rutting and fatigue resistance,” Giustozzi said.

“In some instances, the performance of the mix was similar to some of the more expensive polymers used in roads and substantially higher than conventional asphalt mixes.”

Supporting widescale adoption

Austroads Chief Executive, Geoff Allan, noted increasing interest in exploring the viability of repurposing recycled waste plastic, and said Austroads was leading ground-breaking work to investigate the most suitable types of plastics for use in roads.

“This project builds on the work completed last year that confirmed recycled plastics can be successfully incorporated in road infrastructure without detrimental effects on the environment, the health and safety of the workers, or the future recyclability of plastic-modified asphalt,” Allan said.

“A major contribution of this project will be to develop evidence-based guidance that will provide certainty to road managers about the use of recycled plastics in road surfacing applications and thus lay the foundations for this solution to be embraced nationally.”

Along with Austroads, the collaboration includes Australian pavement authorities and specialists, including public works and building bodies, as well as recyclers and contractors.

It will be coordinated under the ARC Industrial Transformation Research Hub for Transformation of Reclaimed Waste Resources to Engineered Materials and Solutions for a Circular Economy (TREMS).

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