Heated Roads Are Set To Revolutionise Winter Driving
When we think about winter driving, it’s easy to get carried away with thoughts of drifting in the snow, hooning roundabouts and practising car control. In reality, however, we’re faced with half-gritted roads, patches of black ice and stranded BMWs. Thankfully, an American Professor has developed a new type of road surface which has the potential to alleviate all of these problems.
The Telegraph has reported that Chris Tuan, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering at the University of Nebraska has developed a new road surface which uses conductive concrete, which is made by incorporating steel shavings and carbon particles into a traditional concrete mix. This allows a low current to pass through the concrete, heating the surface to just above freezing. As a result, snow and ice don’t have time to form. This has two major benefits for motoring enthusiasts:
1. Hoon all year round
Heated roads have been trialled in the past, but they’ve never been successful. The main reason for this has been their inconsistency. The majority of heated roads use electric coils, heating the surface in a patchy manner. This is argubly worse than having a fully dry, or fully wet road, because grip levels are so unpredictable.
Chris Tuan noticed this problem, and set out to solve it. That’s why his conductive concrete heats up consistently and evenly. In an interview with National Geographic he explained “When you use conducting concrete, the entire concrete heats up, there is no cold area.” That means that we’ll be able to pull our cars and bikes out of the garage in the dead of winter and give them a thrash, without having to worry about black ice or stranded drivers.
2. RIP gritters and snow plows
One of the worst things about winter driving is the toll it takes on your car. Grit, also known as road salt, is highly corrosive and can eat away at the undercarriage of your pride and joy. And if you’re unlucky enough to get stuck behind a gritting machine, you’ll end up with your vehicle getting sand blasted.
Thankfully, this new type of road surface would render gritting and other winter road treatments obsolete, lowering maintenance costs considerably. Granted, the conductive concrete mix currently costs around £200 ($300) per cubic yard, which is significantly more expensive than the £80 ($120) per cubic yard of traditional concrete, but the money saved on maintenance in the long run would make up for the initial outlay.
This was proved during a test of the new road surface on the Roca Spur Bridge in Nebraska. During a three-day storm, the road was kept completely clear, and the cost of heating the road was only £170 ($250). That cost is far less expensive than deploying the traditional road maintenance teams. Another benefit of the system was the consistent temperature of the surface throughout winter. In the long term this would prevent roads from cracking up and developing pot-holes.
So what’s the catch? Well, like any new technology, it needs to go through a long process of testing. Tuan is currently working with the US Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) to see if the concrete is suitable for use on runways. If the testing goes well, we might see this technology on our own local roads in the not too distant future.
Comments
Not intentionally trying to be a hippy tree hugger, but wouldn’t changing the temperature of vast areas of tarmac be sufficient to alter or cause problems with the climate balance?
You are joking, right? It’s barely above freezing point. It wont attract cats either, before someone ask that too. :D
Whoo, Go Huskers!
As someone who has family in the Nebraska area and has been snowed in up there multiple times, I am glad to see a possible solution. Granted, NE snowstorms aren’t bad compared to other places, but 2 feet of snow still hampers travel a bit.
I want to know how it does in places like Alaska or Canada….
R.i.p. homemade snow rally
We have problems with global warming… I think heating a big patch of the earth would not be good or am I wrong? I would love it though, I HATE nothing more than salt.
Not nearly as bad as pouring salt everywhere. Freshwater fish and plants tend not to like it when you pour salt all over them. Also, the surface would only be heated a few degrees to stop ice from forming, it would still feel very cold to the touch.
Will never happen, who will want to pay for it? Governments definitely won’t! But should definitely happen on racetracks because nothing worse than going to a track day and the track being soaked.
Governments might want to. As the article said, it’s a bit more expensive upfront, but if the extra cost means you can sell all your snowplows/gritters, clear more roads faster, and prevent ice formation that causes cracks and potholes, leading to a need to repave or patch the roads, the cost is probably fairly even over time.
Midwest!
I really can’t feel anything positive after i heard what the #EPA is proposing.
Meanwhile in California…
How stupid is this? Mount winter tyres, and if you cannot handle your car on slippy roads take the bus.They fear global warming and want to heat the streets in the winter?
Maan, let winter be winter and summer be summer….humanity gets dumb and dumber!!!
Well, I hate grit on my car…
Not sure if you’re equating heating the roads to global warming through a direct correlation by increasing the temperature? Or by the energy needed to power it..humanity does get dumb and dumber