Traditional concrete and asphalt disposal
Traditionally, materials like asphalt and concrete were relegated to landfills upon removal. After being removed from parking lots or construction sites, they’d simply be transported to the nearest landfill for disposal. The approach, while simple, still resulted in freight costs, and, obviously, in landfill sites that were filled more quickly. Recycling changed that by enabling materials to be reused. However, in the early days of recycling, reuse was almost solely as fill product, due to issues of quality and gradation irregularity.
Today, however, recycled concrete and asphalt can be crushed into forms that are usable in a breadth of industry applications.
How concrete and asphalt recycling work today
Concrete Recycling
Concrete recycling entails breaking, removing, and crushing concrete into a material of a specified size and quality—not unlike the processes of crushing virgin materials. Demolished sidewalks, building columns, or foundations are broken up and compiled. The concrete can either be hauled to a recycling site for crushing or (often more cost-effectively) crushed on-site using a portable crushing rig.
Advances in equipment and technology have enabled more comprehensive crushing of a broader range of concretes. Steel remnants are now removed with less manual labor, and materials ranging from jointed plain pavement, to jointed reinforced pavement, to continuously reinforced pavement, can all be crushed given the appropriate equipment.
Once crushed to specifications, recycled concrete material isput to use. While it’s often still used as subbase, it can also be used as an aggregate for new concrete—although, in this case, it’s often combined with virgin material aggregate as well.
Asphalt recycling
Asphalt recycling is increasingly commonin the US; according to the Federal Highway Administration, over 80 percent of asphalt removed from roads is recycled. And that’s partly due to its functionality. The FHA also asserts that:
Recycled asphalt product is now routinely accepted in asphalt paving mixtures as an aggregate substitute and as a portion of the binder in nearly all 50 states. Recently developed technology has even made it possible to recycle 90 to 100 percent recycled asphalt product in hot mix.
The process is, again,similar totraditional crushing processes: asphalt is broken, removed from parking lots and roads, and then hauled to locations where it’s chipped and stockpiled. In its crushed form, it’s often used as a chalk mix to replace what’s been removed.
The limitations of recycling concrete and asphalt
While recycling has improved over the past few decades in terms of material functionality, there remain a few limitations.
First, while the gradation control of recycled materials compares favorably to the gradation quality of virgin materials, abrasion does tend to be different. Additionally, there have been prior instances of contaminants found in recycled materials—although today, with adherence to proper processes and the use of improved technologies, this is very unlikely.
The benefits of recycling concrete and asphalt
The substantial benefits of recycling offset its limitations, though. There are two main reasons to recycle concrete and asphalt. The first is efficiency—often, the cost to recycle material is less than the cost of disposing of material in a landfill. That, coupled with the cost savings on the use of recycled material, makes recycling an economically appealing option.
Secondly, recycling is more environmentally friendly. Not only does recycling reduce the amount of material that ends up in landfills, but it can also reduce transportation mileage, especially if crushing is done on-site via a portable crusher.
Trends in concrete and asphalt recycling
So, what does the future hold for concrete and asphalt recycling? Put simply: probably more of it.
More and more recycled material is being used, and its usage is increasingly being broadened into applications traditionally reserved for virgin material. As the quality of recycled materials improves, so does the legislative pressure to use them. In New Jersey, for instance, there’s a mandate that forbids any recyclable materials from being disposed of in landfills. Asphalt and concrete, consequently, are nearly always recycled.
About the Author
Our guest blogger, the Mellott Company, is an official Metso Outotec distributor since 2000. Mellott’s journey started in the 1920s as a lumber and coal company, and they have been contributing to the development of the construction industry in the US for nearly 100 years. Today, Mellott provides a full-scope of aggregates solutions ranging from contract crushing and systems engineering to parts sales and service. The company has headquarters and manufacturing campus in Warfordsburg, Pennsylvania, US.