asphalt shingle recycling: recycled materials resource center and environmental issues

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Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues Jenna R. Jambeck, PhD Research Assistant Professor, UNH Recycled Materials Resource Center Chicago, IL November 1-2, 2007

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Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues. Chicago, IL November 1-2, 2007. Jenna R. Jambeck, PhD Research Assistant Professor, UNH Recycled Materials Resource Center. Established in TEA-21 in 1998 National center in partnership with FHWA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Asphalt Shingle Recycling:Recycled Materials Resource Center and

Environmental Issues

Jenna R. Jambeck, PhDResearch Assistant Professor, UNHRecycled Materials Resource Center

Chicago, IL November 1-2, 2007

Page 2: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

MISSION

Overcome barriers to the appropriate use of recycled materials in the highway environment

RMRC Overview/History

• Established in TEA-21 in 1998

• National center in partnership with FHWA

• Focus on the long term engineering and environmental performance of recycled materials in the highway environment

• Primary activities are research and outreach

Page 3: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Current RMRCJoint venture of University of New Hampshire and

University of Wisconsin-Madison

- UNH: Kevin Gardner (co-director), Jeff Melton, Jenna Jambeck, David Gress, Colleen Mitchell

- UW: Craig Benson (co-director), Tuncer Edil, Hussain Bahia, Andy Graettinger, Phil O’Leary, and Gary Whited

Page 4: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Approach

The original Center had seven recycled materials focus areas:

1. Testing and evaluation guidelines and specifications

2. Material-application specific research and development

3. Economic and institutional issues

4. New materials and innovative technologies

5. Field trials of materials

6. Technical services

7. Technology transfer and training

Page 5: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Research Map

Over 40 Research projects completed!

Page 6: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Partners: MnDOT, Minn. Office of Environmental Assistance, Minn. Local Road Research Board, SKB Environmental, Bituminous Roadways, Inc.

Principal Investigators: Roger Olson, MnDOT & Dan Krivit, Dan Krivit & Assoc.

Project Stats: 32 Months (July 2002 – December 2004)

Approach:• Prepare design documents• Two field demonstrations• Evaluate demonstrations

Project 22 - Overcoming Barriers to Asphalt Shingle Recycling

Page 7: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Other Activities

• Shingle Recycling Forums• 2003, 2007

• Provisional Specifications• American Association of State Highway and

Transportation (AASHTO), "Use of Reclaimed Asphalt Shingle as an Additive in Hot Mix Asphalt: A Provisional Standard Specification (M2005A-TS-2c)" Final publication in preparation.

• American Association of State Highway and Transportation (AASHTO), "Provisional Standard Recommended Practice for Design Considerations when using Reclaimed Asphalt Shingles in New Hot Mix Asphalt (R2005A-TS-2c)" Final publication in preparation.

Page 8: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Education and Outreach

Page 9: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

RMRC Outreach• RMRC sponsored conference sessions• RMRC sponsored workshops• Beneficial Use of Recycled Materials in

Transportation Applications Conference• Software and guidance documents

• Beneficial Use Guidelines - shingles

Page 10: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

RMRC Recycled Materials Workshops

• Four workshops – Northeast, Southeast, Midwest, West

• Attendees – FHWA, State DOT, State Environmental Agencies, US EPA

• Focus on training recycling/beneficial use coordinators, improving DOT recycling programs

• Providing a forum for communication

Page 11: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

How is sustainability and shingle recycling related?

Page 12: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Sustainability

• Sustain: to keep in existence; maintain

• Big picture• Sustain the earth• Finite resources

–Decrease or mitigate negative environmental impacts of human existence–Conserve resources

Page 13: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Environmental Impacts

• Examine impacts of various options/choices and choose those with the least impact

• How to quantify?• Impacts can be assessed:

• Greenhouse gas generation

(e.g., methane, carbon dioxide)• SOx, NOx emissions• Toxics released (air, water, soil)

• Organics – TCE, PBDE, etc.• Inorganics – Hg, Pb, etc.• Exposure routes may be considered

Page 14: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Conservation of Resources

• Use as little of our resources as possible • Use renewable resources• Reuse products already produced

• Conserves energy• Recycle the materials from a product to make a new

product• No need for virgin materials

• Extract resources from the product • Conversion into energy

Page 15: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Economics

• In the long run, it doesn’t save to exploit our resources

• But the immediate cost time frame is critical for a market economy• Often times immediate costs and sustainable

practices coincide• Sometimes more sustainable practices (or

switching to them) can result in a greater expense• Often there is a payback

• Many corporations, industries and institutions now see the benefits in practicing environmental sustainability

Page 16: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

It can be a difficult balance between environmental impacts, trade-offs and cost…

RMRC has experience evaluating risk, benefits and cost.

Page 17: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Partners: MnDOT (MnROAD), NYSDEC, Laboratoire Centrale des Ponts et Chausees (LCPC)

Principal Investigators: Dr. Taylor Eighmy & Dr. Kevin Garner, UNH

Project Stats: June 2000 – August 2004

Approach:• Literature review• Model selection• Model validation with MnROAD data• Develop a risk assessment approach for state regulatory agency use

Project 7/8 - Development of a Risk Analysis Framework for Beneficial Use of Secondary Materials

WaterTableRise

VaporMovement

CapillarySuction

Surface Surface EntryEntry

HighGround

Drainage

Run-offRun-off

Page 18: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Sustainable Road Construction

• Must create a product with consistent high quality

• From that standpoint, how can we do this in a more sustainable manner?• Beneficially use materials; offset virgin

materials - shingles• Recycle materials

• Assess environmental burdens and trade-offs of various options

• Life-cycle assessment

Page 19: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Potential Applications

What are potential environment and health impacts of using a material in an application?• Context of use• Proper characterization• Potential receptors and risks• Trade-offs

Environmental Characterization• Shingles

• Asbestos• PAHs

Page 20: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Pavement Life-cycle Assessment Tool for Environmental and Economic Effects

(PaLATE)

Developed by Arpad Horvath (UC Berkeley) for the Recycled Materials Resource Center

www.recycledmaterials.org

Page 21: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Questions that can be answered:

• For a particular roadway, which material is better environmentally, economically: e.g., recycled or virgin?

• Will changing the recycled material content in a particular pavement affect its environmental impact?

• Does sending demolished portions of a road to a processing plant or to a landfill make more environmental and economic sense?

• Which maintenance options will minimize environmental and economic effects?

Page 22: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Factors that are considered:

• Design of the roadway • Construction materials, material

transportation distances and modes• Technology choices – e.g., on-site

construction and maintenance equipment (e.g., asphalt paver), and off-site processing equipment (e.g., rock crusher)

• Life-cycle economic costs

Page 23: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Recycled Material Use Example

• Conceptual for shingles• Crumb rubber surrogate in asphalt• Road in NH, 2.6 miles, single lane (31

feet wide)• 5.5 inch wearing course, 12 inch base

Page 24: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Energy

Total Roadway Inputs

6,700,000

6,800,000

6,900,000

7,000,000

7,100,000

7,200,000

7,300,000

7,400,000

7,500,000

7,600,000

Virgin 5% 12%

Asphalt Binder Crumb Rubber Mix

En

erg

y (

MJ)

.

Processes

Production

Page 25: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Carbon Dioxide Emissions

Total Roadway Inputs

400

410

420

430

440

450

460

Virgin 5% 12%

Asphalt Binder Crumb Rubber Mix

CO

2 (M

g)

= G

WP

.

Processes

Production

Page 26: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Case Study Results: Energy Consumption (MJ)

0

1,000,000

2,000,000

3,000,000

4,000,000

5,000,000

6,000,000

7,000,000

8,000,000

9,000,000

Initial Construction Maintenance Total Initial Construction Maintenance Total

En

erg

gy

[MJ]

Processes (Equipment)

Materials Transportation

Materials Production

Initial Construction - RubblizationMaintenance - Crack Seal & Resurface

Initial Construction - Virgin MaterialsMaintenance - HIPR

Initial Construction: Recycling uses 3.5M MJ less energy than use of virgin materials (reduced materials production)Maintenance: HIPR uses 1.5M MJ less than crack sealing & resurfacing.

HIPR - equipment processesCrack seal & resurfacing - materials production

Page 27: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Case Study Scenario (2)

• Divided PA DOT PGH demand into 5 areas defined by a single point• City center• 25 miles north,

south, east and west of city center

N

S

E

CCW

Page 28: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Summary

• The future of utilizing recycled materials, including shingles, fits in with our sustainability concept• Life-cycle impacts

• RMRC will Continue to• Be a central resource for technical issues

• Engineering• Environmental

• Conduct outreach and education• Webinars, etc.• Be a bridge between stakeholders

• Let us know how else we can help!

Page 29: Asphalt Shingle Recycling: Recycled Materials Resource Center and Environmental Issues

Further information available on RMRC website:

www.recycledmaterials.org

Jenna R. Jambeck, PhDResearch Assistant Professor

Department of Civil/Environmental EngineeringUniversity of New Hampshire

244 Gregg Hall, 35 Colovos Rd.Durham, NH  03824

Phone: [email protected]