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Mathe Group expands capacity to produce more rubber crumb for roads

Mathe Group factory where truck tyres are processed into rubber crumb

Rubber bitumen in a typical asphalt overlay application

Mathe Group bitumen project

4th March 2024

By: Tasneem Bulbulia

Senior Contributing Editor Online

     

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The use of large amounts of recycled rubber crumb for the manufacture of road surfaces and related products is propelling South Africa towards a circular economy where waste products are used to address key infrastructure needs, Hammarsdale-based radial truck tyre recycler Mathe Group CEO Dr Mehran Zarrebini avers.

Much of the production from Mathe Group’s factory, which recycles about 1 000 radial truck tyres daily to produce 45 t of rubber crumb, goes to bitumen product manufacturer Tosas, for the manufacture of rubber modified bitumen, a product that is being used by the South Africa National Road Agency Limited (Sanral) for upgrades to the N1, in Gauteng, and the N2/N3 leading from the Port of Durban, Mathe Group points out.

Tosas approached Mathe Group in 2016 for the supply of rubber crumb. This was shortly after Mathe Group moved from a small facility in New Germany to its present location in Hammarsdale. Since then, the company says it has increased crumb production considerably. 

Tosas MD Deon Pagel highlights the company’s commitment to keeping up with the latest technological developments, evidenced by its bitumen testing laboratory and in the development of new bitumen products.

According to Pagel, although people still refer to so-called black top roads as “tarred” roads, the use of tar which is extracted from coal and is carcinogenic has been discontinued and replaced with bitumen, which is extracted from crude oil.

Bitumen, which, for chipseal applications is sprayed onto the road surface at up to double the temperature of boiling water, seals the top road layerworks, protecting the foundation layers beneath, acting as a waterproofing layer.

Alternatively, it can be mixed in with the asphalt and acts as a glue, strengthening the road itself, he explains.

This bitumen that exits a refinery –  known as penetration-grade bitumen – is modified with the addition of a variety of different modifiers. Rubber-modified bitumen is created by mixing 20% rubber crumb with 80% bitumen and extender oils.

“This is one of the most superior road bitumen products in the world and, on top of that, you have the benefit of recycling. You take old tyres and convert them into a usable product. It is a win-win,” Pagel asserts.

This mutually beneficial solution has been extended to the point where bitumen rubber has now been generically specified by government and other road authorities and owners for use in the construction of roads throughout the country.

Further to Mathe Group producing rubber crumb through ambient grinding of radial truck tyres for Tosas, the companies have designed and developed a second plant to produce what is known as new crumb rubber technology.

This involves coating the rubber crumb with aromatic oil and specialised waxes to produce a pre-swollen rubber crumb that is bitumen rubber for asphalt mixes and spray seal applications that are posited to have greater longevity and lower mixing temperatures.

Zarrebini, who is now looking to install a further line that will double output at Mathe Group’s Hammarsdale factory, is confident that the company can accommodate the growing need for rubber crumb for roads as well as other applications.

“The recycling plant that we have designed is flexible and we can manufacture different particle sizes of rubber crumb for different end-uses at the same time. The specific rubber crumb size that is used for rubber modified bitumen is of the finer quality.

“The courser grades are used as infill for artificial turf and as elastic layers for sports applications. The material that is finer than that used in rubber modified bitumen is utilised in non-slip paints, automotive brake pads and to manufacture new tyres,” he explains.

He adds that there is room for growing the amount of rubber crumb used in the roads industry, although this is largely dependent on Sanral awarding tenders for infrastructure projects and having the available funding to follow through with these projects.

“From a production perspective, we have the flexibility of only manufacturing the grade of rubber crumb utilised in rubber-modified bitumen or if the demand is lower, then we can switch to manufacturing a combination of grades of rubber crumb for other industrial uses.

“During 2023, we implemented machinery upgrades which enhanced output. We continue to invest in maintaining and upgrading our equipment. In 2024, we will see further enhancements to the plant which will result in greater output,” Zarrebini highlights.  

Edited by Chanel de Bruyn
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

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