Yuma Sun

Cool roads

Pavement technology could chill cities from ground up

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX – Sunbathers understand the benefits of applying sunscreen, but in America’s hottest big city the same concept is being tested at street level in the hope of bringing some lasting relief from the relentless Arizona sun.

A team from Arizona State University is working with the city of Phoenix on a pilot program studying the use of “cool pavement” to reduce heat island effect, a phenomenon that raises temperatur­es in urban areas covered by asphalt and concrete.

Heather Murphy, a Street Transporta­tion Department spokespers­on, said Phoenix is applying cool pavement coating to nine sites representi­ng different urban characteri­stics, from shaded streets to open lots. The applicatio­ns are expected to be completed by the end of the month.

“What sunscreen does is prevent the sun from damaging the surface,” Murphy said. “The same sort of effect is what we want to achieve with cool pavement.”

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency says normal paving materials can reach temperatur­es of 120 to 150 degrees Fahrenheit (48 to 67 Celsius) during peak summer and transfer excess heat into the air. Lowering the surface temperatur­e can provide comfort and reduced energy costs to residents sheltering from extreme heat like the record levels reached this year in Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas.

Phoenix set a U.S. record Oct. 14 for 144 days of temperatur­es over 100 degrees (37.7 Celsius), the most in a calendar year. The previous record of 143 days was in 1989. The city in the Sonoran Desert also set records this year for 50 days of 110 degrees (43.3 Celsius) or more and the hottest August since temperatur­e

tracking began in 1896.

Heat island effect is a “major factor” in both day and nighttime temperatur­es and a potential health hazard, Arizona State Climatolog­ist Nancy Selover said, noting the particular risk to those who cannot afford air conditioni­ng and homeless residents sleeping outside. “When we stay hot at night – we had 29 mornings that had a temperatur­e of 90 or higher at sunrise this year – the day just gets hotter from there,” Selover said in an email. “So the maximum is likely to be a few degrees warmer than it would be if the night had cooled.”

Ronnen Levinson, who leads the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s Heat Island Group at the University of California, Berkeley, said cool pavement can simultaneo­usly address some of the most important issues facing the hottest cities in the U.S. and a world experienci­ng alarming climate change.

“Cool pavements have potential to mitigate the urban heat island, to save energy in buildings if they

lower the outside air temperatur­e, reducing the demand for air conditioni­ng in the building, and they can slow global warming by reflecting more sunlight back to space,” Levinson said. There are two basic categories of cool pavement, Levinson said. Reflective cool pavement has a lighter color and chemical properties that turn sunlight back toward the atmosphere rather than absorbing heat like dark asphalt. Evaporativ­e pavement relies on rainwater seeping into its porous surface and then cooling the pavement and the air during slow evaporatio­n. The choice of which technology to use is based on whether a city gets rain during its hottest months or is in a dry climate.

David Sailor, director of the Arizona State Urban Climate Research Center, shared an aerial infrared image taken from a helicopter displaying ground temperatur­es in adjoining parking lots with and without cool pavement coating.

“The (cool pavement) surface temperatur­e is 129 Fahrenheit,” Sailor said.

“But the asphalt next to it was at least in the 150s.”

Reducing surface temperatur­e can have direct benefits by lowering air temperatur­e, which Sailor said has “significan­t implicatio­ns for heat-related illness, air quality, water use, and energy use.”

“It is estimated that a 1 degree Fahrenheit reduction in air temperatur­es in Phoenix can result in a 1.5% to 3% reduction in residentia­l use of potable water,” Sailor said.

In addition to helicopter images, Sailor said the researcher­s use cars taking air and infrared readings, sensors planted in the pavement and a custom cart measuring mean radiant temperatur­e as it rolls along sidewalks and streets.

“We basically get subsurface temperatur­es, surface temperatur­es and then air temperatur­es,” Sailor said.

The Phoenix research team will take readings over time to determine how the cool pavement responds to city life, Sailor said.

“As they wear – as people do donuts in intersecti­ons and leave skid marks and

dirt – the reflective properties change for the worse over time,” Sailor said.

Cool pavement coatings are typically made of polymers, the binding chemicals also used in house paint, and more energy and carbon is required to manufactur­e polymers than normal asphalt coatings, Levinson said.

Phoenix uses CoolSeal, which California-based GuardTop LLC said on its website is not a polymer, but rather a water-based, asphalt-emulsion the company claims can reduce surface temperatur­es by 10 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit.

Reflective cool pavement also does not guarantee comfort in the immediate surroundin­gs. The surface bounces the sun’s heat upward into the atmosphere, but also sideways toward buildings and pedestrian­s, Levinson said.

Even when monitoring equipment shows lower surface temperatur­es, people may feel warmer. Reflected solar radiation will be absorbed by people wearing dark clothing, while lighter garments deflect sun rays. Tree shade and winds dispersing heat can help improve comfort levels, but an

open lot or exposed street can become unpleasant.

Sailor noted cool pavement was used on a marathon route for the 2020 summer Olympics in Japan, which was postponed because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, but the solar reflection likely would have made runners feel hotter even with a lower surface temperatur­e.

Despite higher costs than ordinary asphalt, Sailor estimated cool pavement can result in notable savings in Maricopa County, where Phoenix is located.

“A single degree Fahrenheit reduction in air temperatur­e during the summer could save residentia­l ratepayers something like $75 million per year in avoided air conditioni­ng costs,” Sailor said.

Murphy said the total cost of Phoenix’s pilot program is $3.3 million from the city’s street maintenanc­e budget and primarily includes materials and labor to cover 36 street miles.

The nine areas chosen were already due for resurfacin­g and the money would have gone toward rehabilita­ting those areas regardless of the material used, she said.

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 ?? CITY OF PHONEIX ?? A CITY OF PHOENIX STREET TRANSPORTA­TION DEPARTMENT CREW sprays light-colored pavement over blacktop on a street in the Garfield District of Phoenix on Aug. 11. A team from Arizona State University is working with the city of Phoenix on a pilot program studying the use of “cool pavement” to reduce heat island effect, a phenomenon that raises temperatur­es in urban areas covered by asphalt and concrete.
CITY OF PHONEIX A CITY OF PHOENIX STREET TRANSPORTA­TION DEPARTMENT CREW sprays light-colored pavement over blacktop on a street in the Garfield District of Phoenix on Aug. 11. A team from Arizona State University is working with the city of Phoenix on a pilot program studying the use of “cool pavement” to reduce heat island effect, a phenomenon that raises temperatur­es in urban areas covered by asphalt and concrete.
 ?? ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ?? ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY STUDENT AARON MEHNER prepares a device that will measure the heat given off from Phoenix streets on Sept. 12.
ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY STUDENT AARON MEHNER prepares a device that will measure the heat given off from Phoenix streets on Sept. 12.

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