Slipping and sliding on snowy or icy roads is dangerous. Salt and sand help melt ice or provide traction, but excessive use is bad for the environment. And sometimes, a surprise storm can blow through before these materials can be applied. Now, researchers reporting in ACS Omega have filled microcapsules with a chloride-free salt mixture that's added into asphalt before roads are paved, providing long-term snow melting capabilities in a real-world test.
From: American
Chemical Society
February 16, 2023 -- Driving
on snowy roads at or near-freezing temperatures can create unsafe conditions,
forming nearly invisible, slick black ice, if roads aren't cleaned quickly
enough. But the most common ways to keep roads clear have significant downsides:
- Regular
plowing requires costly equipment, is labor intensive and can damage
pavement.
- Heavy
salt or sand applications can harm the environment.
- Heated
pavement technologies are prohibitively expensive to use on long roadways.
Recently, researchers have incorporated salt-storage
systems into "anti-icing asphalt" to remove snow and prevent black
ice from forming. However, these asphalt pavements use corrosive chloride-based
salts and only release snow-melting substances for a few years. So, Yarong
Peng, Quansheng Zhao, Xiaomeng Chu and colleagues wanted to develop a
longer-term, chloride-free additive to effectively melt and remove snow cover
on winter roads.
The researchers prepared a sodium acetate salt and
combined it with a surfactant, silicon dioxide, sodium bicarbonate and blast
furnace slag -- a waste product from power plant operations -- to produce a
fine powder. They then coated the particles in the powder with a polymer
solution, forming tiny microcapsules. Next, the team replaced some of the mineral
filler in an asphalt mixture with the microcapsules.
In initial experiments, a pavement block made with
the new additive lowered the freezing point of water to -6 F. And the
researchers estimated that a 5-cm-thick layer of the anti-icing asphalt would
be effective at melting snow for seven to eight years. A real-world pilot test
of the anti-icing asphalt on the off-ramp of a highway showed that it melted
snow that fell on the road, whereas traditional pavement required additional
removal operations. Because the additive used waste products and could release
salt for most of a road's lifetime, the researchers say that is a practical and
economic solution for wintertime snow and ice removal.
The authors acknowledge funding from the
Science and Technology Project of Hebei Provincial Transportation Department.
Keeping
drivers safe with a road that can melt snow, ice on its own -- ScienceDaily
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