Say Good Bye To Asphalt!
By Nader Ramadan

Both photos courtesy of Dr. Safwan
Cairo- Most gardeners usually get frustrated with their weed problem. They slash them, cut them, or chemically poison them. It is literally a weed holocaust. However, after the discovery that Dr. Safwan Khedr and his student Karim Abdel Warith with Tharwat Aguib made about local giant milkweeds, planting weeds may one day form an essential component of Egypt’s agricultural sector rather than a normal everyday nuisance!
Giant milkweeds, Calotropis procera, contains a sticky, milky substance that could potentially replace the asphalt which is used to stick the small aggregates that makeup road concrete. Dr.Khedr, a construction engineering professor at the American University in Cairo, Tharwat Aguib, a research associate, and Abdel Warith, currently a Phd student at Purdue University, have coined a new term for the milky substance, Agmin.
Agmin was used by traditional Nubian dentists for tooth fillings. It’s sticky and soft It has physical properties compatible to those of asphalt and can possibly be more environmentally friendly. “It’s sticky, it’s malleable….It’s asphalt,” said Abdel Warith.
Dr. Khedr, Abdel Warith, and Aguib have tested the substance for rutting, a measurement used among construction engineers to indicate the rate of pavement degradation over time. The weight of the cars and extreme temperature conditions eventually eat away at the pavement that makes up the road causing it to crack or break. Cracks or small potholes in the road can inflict significant damage on the wheels of the car and potentially cause accidents.
Based on the tests, Dr. Khedr, Aguib and Abdel Warith found agmin-based pavement mix hardens while the temperature increases, thus eliminating any concern for major rutting damage. In contrast, asphalt-based pavement softens in high temperature conditions increasing the likeliness of major road damage.
It is also believed that asphalt has contributed to climate change because of the harmful emissions that are released as a result of the combustion of fossil fuels. Some countries are testing bioasphalts as another possible alternative. Yet, what Dr. Khedr, Aguib, and Abdel Warith are working on is a complete replacement of asphalt which is expected to save 25%-40% of the cost of road construction.
But Dr. Khedr and Abdel Warith still think agmin is in need of more testing. So for the time being, the duos are telling the construction contractors to hold their horses.”We are only recommending it for the base [of the roads],” said Dr. Khedr.
Gardeners may want to think again before whacking their weeds!











[...] ecooptionsegypt.com » Blog Archive » Say Good Bye To Asphalt! "Giant milkweeds, Calotropis procera, contains a sticky, milky substance that could potentially replace the asphalt which is used to stick the small aggregates that makeup road concrete. Dr.Khedr, a construction engineering professor at the American University in Cairo, Tharwat Aguib, a research associate, and Abdel Warith, currently a Phd student at Purdue University, have coined a new term for the milky substance, Agmin. [..] [They] have tested the substance for rutting, a measure [of] the rate of pavement degradation over time. [..] [...]
Dear All
Let me congratulate you on the launching of this site, which I hope will add to the global effort of halting and reversing all the environmental hazardous effects in the world.
I will regularly pass by and try to give a comment whenever possible. I see your viewers are not bad in one day.
Regards
Amr Abbas Mahgoub
What a fantastic invention! I hope further testing proves its validity. God knows we could use pot-hole free roads and less carbon emissions in Egypt!
Dear Omneia
Such efforts will definitely give hope of rescuing our riparian environments form hazards.
Looking forward to see more of your intiative.
I am pleased to comment on Mr. Abbas commentarry “I see your viewers are not bad in one day”.
In fact the real viewer is the environment itslef on wcich all these invaluable efforts falling.
Regards..
El Tayeb A.Khalafallah
needed here
rUYvM1 I want to say – thank you for this!
Dear Nader Ramadan,
I liked your article very much.
Would you allow me to write about the study in our “Entrepreneur MENA” Magazine. It is a regional monthly magazine published in Arabic.
Please send me an email.
Thanks.
Nice webpage.
We offer office and retail cleaning carried out by specialist trained cleaners.
Our cleaning technicians are experienced and reliable.
Discover more about our [url=http://www.cleanerlondon.com/carpet-cleaning-london.php]office cleaning[/url] technicians.
Really great post you have here. It’d be really cool to read more concerning such matter. Thanks for sharing that info.
Leave your response!
If you have to go somewhere close consider riding your bike or walking there instead of your car. It is better on the environment and healthier.
Polls
Links
Archives
Categories
Current Moon Phase
User Online
Most Commented
Most Viewed