Plastic Road Report
Plastic Road Report
Plastic Road Report
REPORT
ON
Plastic road
SUBMITTED BY,
VINAYAKA M N
1RV10CV403,
Harish v
1rv10cv401.
INTRODUCTION
Plastic use in road construction is not new. Recent studies in this direction have shown
some hope in terms of using plastic-waste in road construction i.e., Plastic roads. Plastic roads
mainly use plastic carry-bags, disposable cups and PET bottles that are collected from garbage
dumps as an important ingredient of the construction material. When mixed with hot bitumen,
plastics melt to form an oily coat over the aggregate and the mixture is laid on the road surface
like a normal tar road.
WHAT IS PLASTIC??
A plastic material is any of a wide range of synthetic or semi-synthetic organic amorphous solids
used in the manufacture of industrial products. Plastics are typically polymers of high molecular mass and
may contain other substances to improve performance and/or reduce costs. Monomers of plastic are either
natural or synthetic organic compounds.
BASIC PROCESSES:
Segregation.
Cleaning process.
Shredding process.
Collection process.
1. SEGRAGATION:
Plastic waste collected from various sources must be separated from other waste. Maximum
thickness of 60 microns.
2. CLEANING PROCESS:
It will be shredded or cut into small piece. The different types of plastic wastes are mixed
together
4. COLLECTION PROCESS:
The plastic road is lightweight, portable, reusable, and inexpensive when amortized over
system life. Its length is tailored to site conditions in 10 foot (3 meter) increments. Plastic road
panels and required accessories for 40 linear feet (12 linear meters) of crossing may be
transported in a 3/4 ton pickup and assembled on a typical site by a two-person crew (see figure
4) in approximately 1 hour. This length of plastic road may be moved from site to site by
chaining-to and towing with a pickup truck or logging equipment. Worn or broken PVC pipe
members are easily replaced, facilitating maintenance and reuse of the system. Materials cost
including geotextile and transition mats (see figure 1) for this length of plastic road is
approximately $2000. Adding labor to fabricate increases the cost to approximately $2500.
Materials are readily available through major hardware distributors.
ADVANTAGES:
Use higher percentage of plastic waste. Reduce the need of bitumen by around 10%.
Reduced penetration and ductility, a higher softening point, less rutting and cold
cracking.
DISADVANTAGES:
Cleaning process
Toxics present in the co-mingled plastic waste would start leaching .
During the road laying process
In the presence of chlorine will definitely release noxious HCL gas .
3.After the road laying
It is opined that the first rain will trigger leaching. As the plastics will merely
form a sticky layer, (mechanical abrasion). The components of the road, once it has been
laid, are not inert.
CONCLUSIONS:
The plastic road is available to aid short term access for vehicles and equipment into the
forest.
The plastic road reduces rut depth and has provided satisfactory service over sensitive
sites and soils of low bearing capacity.
Testing usage outside these constraints and further development effort to optimize
performance is warranted.
REFERENCE:
www.google.com
www.yahoo.com