Manufacturing
HMA is produced in a plant that proportions, blends, and heats aggregate and asphalt to
produce an HMA that conforming to JMF requirements.
There are two basic types of HMA plants commonly in use today: the batch plant,
and the drum mix plant. Batch plants produce HMA in individual batches while
drum plants produce HMA in a continuous operation.
 |
 |
| Figure 1: Batch Plant |
Figure 2: Drum Plant |
Each type of plant can
produce the same types of HMA and neither type of plant should impart any
significant plant-specific HMA characteristics. The choice of a batch or
drum mix plant depends upon business factors such as purchase price, operating
costs, production requirements and the need for flexibility in local markets;
both can produce quality HMA.
Batch plants, which produce HMA in individual batches, are the older of the
two types of HMA production facilities; it was not until the 1970s that drum plants became a popular HMA
production option. Currently about 70 percent of all operational HMA
plants in the U.S. are batch plants while only about 5 percent of all newly
manufactured plants in the U.S. are batch plants (Roberts, et al., 1996). This
means that as older batch plants are retired they are more than likely to be
replaced by new drum plants, which can provide greater mobility and production
capacity. Typical batch quantities range from 1.5 to 5 tons of HMA and
each batch can take 15 - 45 seconds to make.
Drum plants, which produce HMA in a continuous manner, generally offer higher
production rates than batch plants for comparable cost. Typical production
rates for drum plants vary between about 100 tons/hr up to over 900 tons/hr
depending upon drum design.
|