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UK Team Invents Self-Healing Road Surface To Prevent Potholes
mercredi 5 février 2025, 04:30 , par Slashdot
Potholes typically start from small surface cracks that form under the weight of traffic. These allow water to seep into the road surface, where it causes more damage through cycles of freezing and thawing. Bitumen, the sticky black substance used in asphalt, becomes susceptible to cracking when it hardens through oxidation. To make the self-healing bitumen, the researchers mixed in tiny porous plant spores soaked in recycled oils. When the road surface is compressed by passing traffic, it squeezes the spores, which release their oil into any nearby cracks. The oils soften the bitumen enough for it to flow and seal the cracks. Working with researchers at King's College London and Google Cloud, the scientists used machine learning, a form of artificial intelligence, to model the movement of organic molecules in bitumen and simulate the behaviour of the self-healing material to see how it responded to newly formed cracks. The material could be scaled up for use on British roads in a couple of years, the researchers believe. Google published a blog post with more information about the 'self-healing' asphalt. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/02/04/2243225/uk-team-invents-self-healing-road-surface-to-preven...
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mer. 5 févr. - 14:55 CET
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