Pennsylvania takes on 300-mile full-depth reclamation project of rural roads

MarcellushalemapDrilling for natural gas in the Marcellus shale region of northern Pennsylvania has increased traffic of heavy loads on small rural roads.

Because of the depth and nature of the gas-rich shale formation, hydraulic fracturing is being used to release the gas. Each 5-acre drill pad requires about 1,500 trips of 80,000-pound water trucks to open the first well, and 1,000 for each additional well. A pad can support up to eight wells.

Engineers have estimated that one 80,000-pound water truck is the equivalent of 9,500 to 10,000 cars.1 And in the state with the most annual freeze-thaw cycles, annual maintenance has always been a struggle.

This new heavy truck traffic has far exceeded the design of the rural roads, resulting in severe damage, and requiring more than just a new layer of asphalt.

Marcellus shale gas drilling towerMarcellus shale gas drilling tower

With funding from gas providers such as Chesapeake Energy and specifications from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT), the repairs called for full-depth reclamation (FDR) to recycle the existing roads into a stronger base than the original.

EJ Breneman (EJB) of West Lawn, Pa., contacted Stoltz Site Spreaders of Morgantown, Pa., to put together a fleet of Stoltz truck and trailer spreaders to take on a 300-mile repair project.

All together, enough equipment was fabricated and rented to supply seven crews to run separate FDR jobs, all overseen by John DeMartino and Dean Etchberger of EJB.

In Susquehanna County, Pa., EJB used a two step FDR process. First, the old road surface and base were ground and shaped. Second, cement is spread on top of the recycled base. Then the cement and the old road are both ground up again and compacted to form a base for a new 8-inch asphalt surface.

EJ Breneman (EJB) of West Lawn, Pa., contacted Stoltz Site Spreaders of Morgantown, Pa., to put together a fleet of Stoltz truck and trailer spreaders to take on a 300-mile repair projectEJ Breneman (EJB) of West Lawn, Pa., contacted Stoltz Site Spreaders of Morgantown, Pa., to put together a fleet of Stoltz truck and trailer spreaders to take on a 300-mile repair project

Whether the road work was in deep forest or along inhabited areas, dust is the major issue. The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) monitors the air and water impacts of the drilling. Airborne cement dust, although intermittent and a moving point source, was their primary issue with the road work. Cement dust was released when filling a spreader from a bulk tanker truck, and while spreading the cement on the old base ahead of the reclaimer.

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DEP could, and did, order the removal of spreaders lacking sufficient dust controls. According to John DeMartino of EJB, “Although other contractors were shut down due to excessive dust, the Stoltz spreaders basically became the standard against which other spreaders were measured.”

The Stoltz Site Sp

Background: Cement being mixed with the old road and base, with water being added through the reclaimer. Foreground: Reclaimed and compacted old road and base

readers used either popup filter bags, or a filter can with keeny tubes to prevent dust while filling from the bulk tankers. Front and rear conveyor chain seals respond to the inload pressure to further seal the hopper.

Dust control while spreading is primarily controlled by heavy duty dust curtains to control dust splash back and wind drift. In more dust sensitive situations, a spray system is used to suppress fugitive dust.

In a presentation by Tim Ziegler of the Center for Dirt and Gravel Road Studies at Penn State given to the Marcellus Center for Outreach and Research1, pointed to additional advantages of FDR. First, the new base is dust free while awaiting paving, and second, the new road is only inches higher than the old base. By not adding height, the new road does not increase the runoff impoundment from heavy rains.

References:

1. http://www.marcellus.psu.edu/resources

New asphalt road on recycled base

New asphalt road on recycled base

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