Student in Mexico Has Developed Self-Repairing Rubber Road Pavement

Student in Mexico Has Developed Self-Repairing Rubber Road Pavement

Eric Porper
Eric Porper

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A Mexican college student has created a new formula for road pavement that repairs itself when exposed to rainwater.

Israel Antonio Briseño Carmona developed the groundbreaking formula by melting recycled tires into a putty combined with a number of other additives. The putty then harnesses rainwater as a catalyst for regeneration so that—instead of building roads that slowly crumbling away as they are exposed to inclement weather—the water spurs the road mixture to form a calcium silicate that repairs itself.

Carmona’s ingenious road recipe won him the top national James Dyson Award of 2019 last month.

He now plans to get the formula approved for use in Mexico so he can begin brewing the asphalt through his own construction company.