September-October 2007

Choices in Dust Control

Stabilizing seaports, airports, and dusty roads

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By Mary Ellen Hare

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Mohave County is another area using Soil-Sement, according to Koether. “We have been under contract with Mohave County Department of Public Works since August 2004 to provide product and applications for road-subgrade stabilization. Their contract is the most stringent performance-based contract we have ever encountered. We had to provide ASTM lab test results showing the product application rate that would achieve a certain unconfined compressive strength with the county’s control soil. Based on the rate established, that amount of product must be applied on every road treated with that product.”

Mohave is a relatively large rural county, according to Nicholas Hont, assistant director of public works for the county, which maintains about 1,500 miles of dirt or gravel roads. “The maintenance itself causes potential problems from time to time,” Hont says.

For dust control, county maintenance crews typically use water in areas where it is available. However, in the past three years, the county has treated and improved approximately 30 miles of road as part of a maintenance test program approved in 2004 by the Mohave County Board of Supervisors. “So-called soil stabilizers are being used for the improvement of unpaved dirt and gravel roads throughout the county,” Hont says.

Mohave County’s testing program defines soil stabilization as “improving the geotechnical engineering properties of soils and aggregates through the application of stabilizer additives,” according to Hont. “Chemical additives are mixed into the road subgrade and aggregate base material to achieve increased soil strength. The stabilized aggregate surface is treated with chip seal to reduce water infiltration and provide an improved driving surface.”

Koether adds that tanks are measured daily to ensure that the proper amount of product is applied on each road. He says samples are taken daily while it is being applied and are tested later in the lab on the control soil. “If the established unconfined compressive strength is not then achieved, the county will discount payment for the product that was applied. We have bid the contract twice since it started, and Soil-Sement has been the only polymer and only soil-stabilization product that has met the performance standards required in the specifications.”

Hont says many other soil stabilization additives are available on the market, among them polymers, enzymes, lignosulfites, petroleum emulsions, and tree resins. “The most promising products appear to be polymers, enzymes, lignosulfites, and possibly petroleum emulsions, but to date only a polymer supplier was able to meet the county’s requirements and specifications.”

The results of the county’s soil stabilization have been satisfactory, according to Hont. “The road structural section created this way is capable of carrying relatively low-volume traffic loads, the dust is eliminated, and future maintenance costs are reduced by eliminating the need for regular grading, or blading, of the dirt or gravel road.”

Providing Site Services
A relatively new industry has arisen to meet the needs of busy contractors who have enough to think about without worrying how they will meet government specifications for clean air.

Photo: Soilworks
Photo: Soilworks
Photo: Soilworks
Dust suppressant is applied to 100 acres of Port of Houston roads and lots.

Judy Pipkin is an office manager, inspector, and trainer for a private company, United Site Services in Reno, NV, which assists contractors in maintaining compliance with the EPA’s stormwater regulations under the Urban Drainage and Flood Control Act established in 1999.

“We’re on the contractors’ side,” Pipkin says. “Our job is to keep them in compliance and out of trouble.”

Each state that has responsibility for NPDES permitting is ultimately in control for compliance to the federal regulations, according to Pipkin. “If the states and cities aren’t enforcing the regulations, then contractors won’t bother to hire regulatory help services. There are not always enough state and city inspectors to watch all new job sites. If nobody is watching, the general atmosphere is ‘Why worry?’ And you can’t blame the contractors; they have so many other things to worry about on their job sites.”

Landscaping and site-service companies are in heavy competition these days, according to Pipkin, who says that engineers and individual consultants are getting into the game as well.

As part of her job, Pipkin trains contractors and subcontractors. “I outline rules and regulations, tell them what to expect from the federal and state governments, and teach them how to implement best management practices.”

Pipkin also does weekly inspections to make sure a site remains in compliance. “For example, we watch storm drain inlets to make sure they are protected with filter bags or other products that will keep the drains clean.”

Like other states in this arid zone of the country, Nevada has more than its share of dust. “Everybody has runoff problems,” Pipkin says. “But rainfall keeps the dust compacted. Since we don’t have much rain, we must use dust palliatives.”

While water is used 90% of the time as a temporary suppressant, Pipkin likes to see vegetation as the ultimate goal for any site. “At a mall, for instance, we ask the contractor to provide specs outlining the proportion of paving versus landscape versus buildings. It is important to offset paving with berm areas in order to treat the runoff before it reaches the street. Landscaping is no longer just an aesthetic concern; it is also used to act as filters.”

For vacant lots during construction, Pipkin prefers hydraulically applied solutions with a green-colored adhesive for maximum visibility. “That way you can see that the area is already mulched and tackified, and people tend to stay off it.”

While, practically speaking, regulatory measures often are viewed as just one more headache for those in the construction business, Pipkin fully supports the EPA’s initiatives. “Dust palliatives, regulations to maintain dust particles on each site—it all affects the environment.”

Port of Houston
The City of Houston, TX, has made a name for itself in environmental circles. If Houston Mayor Bill White had had his way, Houston would have been the first place in Texas with health standards for hazardous air pollutants in the local nuisance ordinance, thresholds that don’t exist on the state or federal level, according to a report in the March 9 Houston Chronicle. As of March 21, the issue was still being debated after lawmakers filed bills barring a municipality from using a nuisance ordinance to crack down on pollution from outside its boundaries.

As president and founder of AAA Asphalt Paving Inc. in Houston, Mike Hoffman has expanded the company’s role as civil contractor and taken on a project in dust control at the Port of Houston.

“Our name doesn’t really apply to all we do,” Hoffman says. “We do all phases of civil construction, including roads, bridges, and installing stormwater, water, and sewer pipes.”

The Port of Houston is a 25-mile-long complex of public and private facilities with a port that ranks 10th in the world in total tonnage. More than 200 million tons of cargo moved through the port in 2006, and it had to be offloaded and parked somewhere, at least temporarily. This is where Hoffman’s company entered the picture.

AAA Asphalt, which started in 1991 and incorporated in 1995, bid for and received a job to apply the dust suppressant Soiltac to 100 acres of roads and storage lots at the port beginning in March 2007.

“The area gets massive amounts of traffic, with trucks loading and unloading,” Hoffman says. And while Houston gets “more than its share of winter rains,” the summer droughts lead to dust. And dust, wherever it comes from, gets the attention of the regulatory agencies.

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The project to reduce dust and comply with particulate regulations involved spraying Soiltac, a co-polymer supplied by Soilworks LLC of Gilbert, AZ. According to Hoffman, Soiltac is mixed with water, which not only dilutes the chemical but also acts as a conveyance to deposit it into the soil. “As the water dries, the Soiltac bonds.”

Chad Falkenberg, whose company manufactures Soiltac, says that 80,000 gallons of concentrate, or 560,000 gallons of diluted solution, were used on the project. He says the product was specified by the Port of Houston Authority after recommendations from Fugro Consultants LP, a geotechnical engineering company headquartered in Houston. Next Page >

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