Benchmarking the embodied environmental impacts of the design parameters for asphalt mixtures
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Mattinzioli, Tom; Del Sol Sánchez, Miguel; Moreno Navarro, Fernando Manuel; Rubio Gámez, María Del Carmen; Martínez Montes, GermánEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Bench marks Embodied impact Asphalt mixture design Pavement
Fecha
2022Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: T. Mattinzioli, M. Sol-Sanchez, F. Moreno-Navarro, M.C. Rubio-Gamez, G. Martinez. Benchmarking the embodied environmental impacts of the design parameters for asphalt mixtures. Sustainable Materials and Technologies, Volume 32, 2022, e00395. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.susmat.2022.e00395
Patrocinador
LabIC.UGRResumen
For the full abatement of road construction emissions and the enhancement of green public procurement, the embodied environmental and social impacts of asphalt mixture typologies must be better understood. Therefore, the aim of this paper was to explore the environmental impact of five key asphalt mixtures classes (dense-graded, gap-graded, open-graded, porous and stone mastic) and the influence of their design parameters. This was achieved through carrying out 160 life-cycle assessment case study simulations to explore the upper and lower bounds for key design parameters, such as granulometric curve, filler and bitumen content, and filler and bitumen type. Results identified dense-graded (AC) and stone mastic (SMA) mixtures were the most impacting, per tonne, and gap-graded (BBTM A) and stone mastic to be the most impacting per unit depth. Porous mixtures had the largest impact range. Higher traffic classes also would experience an increase in emission levels, due to the need for better, or modified, binders. Future work would require the application of these results to case study projects, to better understand current mixture and construction impacts and the influence of durability.




