Author
Listed:
- Evelio Teijón-López-Zuazo
(Zamora Polytechnical School, University of Salamanca, 49022 Zamora, Spain)
- Ángel Vega-Zamanillo
(Civil Engineering Technical School of Santander, University of Cantabria, 39005 Santander, Spain)
- Cristina Calmeiro dos Santos
(Polytechnic Institute of Castelo Branco, 6000-266 Castelo Branco, Portugal)
- David Gómez-Carrascal
(Civil Engineering Technical School of Santander, University of Cantabria, 39005 Santander, Spain)
Abstract
The circular economy represents a significant opportunity to enhance the mechanical properties of bituminous mixtures, thereby contributing to sustainable development. This research compares the behaviour of traditional bituminous mixtures with sustainable ones that reuse recycled materials, industrial waste products, or additives that improve mechanical or rheological properties. The methodology employed comprised the acquisition of fatigue resistance laws from 4-point bending tests on prismatic specimens. This facilitated the analytical determination of the number of axles of 13 tons that the section of pavement with sustainable material can support for comparison with the axles supported in the conventional mix. The findings corroborate the utilization of sustainable bituminous mixtures in pavement sections, employing the maximum circularity criterion. The fatigue laws calculated must permit the use of different calculation methods or other applications in green infrastructures, such as cycling lanes or pedestrian areas. On sections with an AADT of between 800 and 25 HV/day, all of the analyzed bituminous mixtures with sustainable materials prolong the service life of the road. There were increases in service life of between 25.5% and 6.6%, respectively, which satisfactorily achieved an increase in pavement service life based on the criterion of maximum circularity.
Suggested Citation
Evelio Teijón-López-Zuazo & Ángel Vega-Zamanillo & Cristina Calmeiro dos Santos & David Gómez-Carrascal, 2026.
"Fatigue Analysis of Sustainable Bituminous Pavements with Artificial and Recycled Aggregates,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(2), pages 1-18, January.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:2:p:845-:d:1840454
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