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Discover more stories about Mitacs — and the game-changing innovations driven by students and postdocs.
When the prehistoric Assiniboine River — the one that actually filled its present valley walls — slammed into Lake Agassiz 13,000 years ago on the east side of Brandon, it carried massive amounts of sediment.
The sediments were gravel, sand, silt and clay but gravel was heaviest so it fell first, creating an enormous gravel industry on the edge of Brandon that helped build modern southwestern Manitoba.
EarthZyme works well on gravel roads that are heavily used by industry.
Even today, 150 to 200 trucks per day haul gravel out of an area extending 12 kilometres east of Brandon.
That’s been a tax revenue boon for the RM of Cornwallis but it’s also been hellacious for its network of municipal gravel roads. The truck-hauling roads need to be constantly graded as well as watered up to three times daily to keep down the dust.
So five years ago, the Cornwallis council led by then-reeve Heather Dalgleish tried a new product developed by Brandon University and Cypher Environmental in Winnipeg that promised to slash maintenance costs and reduce dust on gravel roads by 90 per cent.
“I don’t know exactly the dollar figure we saved but I know it is significant,” said Dalgleish. For example, grading was reduced to once a year versus almost daily.
Another benefit involved the smoothing out of Currie’s Landing Road, which was a terrible washboard and the source of complaints from residents in a growing residential area. As well, farmers reported improved yields along those stretches that were constantly being coated in dust.
There are tens of thousands of kilometres of gravel roads in Manitoba that spew dust into your car, your clothes, your pores, and coat many acres of surrounding vegetation in dust. EarthZyme, the Manitoba-made product used in Cornwallis, is proving to be a solution, at least one for gravel roads heavily used by industry.
“It’s a noxious, terrible problem for anyone who lives and works anywhere near gravel roads,” said Brandon University geology Prof. Hamid Mumin, who directed the research project from the university’s side.
The university’s breakthrough was to find a clay base that Cypher Environmental’s EarthZyme product could adhere to. Not all clays are alike. What Mumin found is a very sticky clay, the kind used in pottery but which is normally terrible for construction, worked best as a road cover. Then the researchers had to find a ratio for the clay and aggregate and EarthZyme product that made the strongest cover.
The formula is laid down six to eight inches thick on an existing roadbed and compacted into an almost smooth surface.
“The sticky clay acts as a cementing agent and becomes a very strong binder,” Mumin said. As well, it has plasticity and will not crack and break like cement or asphalt. If a crack does form it can “re-heal” within a week, Mumin said.
The cost is about $75,000 per mile of road. About 12 kilometres of road have been done so far. Paving would cost $1 million per kilometre and isn’t a practical alternative.
A cost of $75,000 may sound high but for Cornwallis the long-term savings have been greater, said Dalgleish.
The RM was spending $40,000 per year just on water. Mumin doubted the RM of Cornwallis would have tried the process if not for the Dalgleish-led council because it requires spending two to three years of municipal budget up front.
The EarthZyme treatment eliminated watering, grading (where a grader fork penetrates two inches into the gravel bed, followed by watering and compacting), as well as re-graveling.
It also eliminated the use of salts, magnesium chloride and calcium chloride, that are commonly used to suppress road dust but are corrosive to vehicle metals. The other problem with salts is they are water-soluble and run off into the ditch after it rains.
Source: Winnipeg Free Press