Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff

Puneeta Sreenivas , Sarah Cotterill , Fiachra O’Loughlin
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Abstract

Increasing prevalence of impervious surfaces can lead to higher surface runoff and overwhelm conventional drainage systems. The limited capacity of conventional drainage systems, coupled with increased precipitation due to climate change, requires retrofitting existing infrastructure with source control Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS). In this study, a porous medium - BlueLay - was evaluated for its hydraulic performance as a potential sustainable drainage material. BlueLay was tested under various rainfall, gradient and material saturation conditions. BlueLay achieved a 100 % runoff reduction when subjected to a medium intensity storm of 98 mm/hr, and a 51 % runoff reduction when subjected to a high rainfall intensity of 179 mm/hr. Infiltration through BlueLay increased with material saturation, indicating higher runoff reduction capacity during longer duration storms. Saturation tests also indicated that BlueLay can absorb up to 4 × its weight in water. Saturated BlueLay also halved the peak runoff rate. Percolation tests suggested that 2 L of water percolated through dry BlueLay in 2 min. It took 8 min to infiltrate the same volume of water through a comparable volume of soil. Additionally, BlueLay begins to infiltrate water faster after successive periods of full saturation and drying. Results suggest that BlueLay in a state of partial or complete saturation could be used to attenuate road runoff by reducing both runoff volume and attenuating peak flow through infiltration and absorption. These hydraulic properties increase its capability to reduce flood risk. Further research is required to determine if BlueLay can also attenuate pollutants, in addition to quantity reduction. To determine the most suitable application for this material, the performance of BlueLay should be tested when interfaced with other porous media such as vegetated soil and gravel which are found next to roads.
BlueLay的水力性能——一种潜在的可持续排水材料,用于减轻城市道路径流
越来越多的不透水地表会导致更高的地表径流,使传统的排水系统不堪重负。传统排水系统的容量有限,再加上气候变化导致的降水增加,需要用源头控制的可持续排水系统(SuDS)改造现有基础设施。在这项研究中,多孔介质BlueLay作为一种潜在的可持续排水材料进行了水力性能评估。BlueLay在各种降雨、梯度和材料饱和度条件下进行了测试。当遭受98 毫米/小时的中等强度风暴时,BlueLay实现了100 %的径流减少,当遭受179 毫米/小时的高降雨强度时,径流减少了51 %。BlueLay的入渗随着物质饱和度的增加而增加,表明在持续时间较长的风暴期间具有更高的径流减少能力。饱和度测试还表明,BlueLay可以在水中吸收高达4 × 自身重量的水分。饱和的BlueLay也使峰值径流率减半。渗透试验表明,2 L的水在2 min内通过干燥的BlueLay渗透。同样体积的水渗入相当体积的土壤需要8 分钟。此外,在连续的完全饱和和干燥期后,BlueLay开始更快地渗透水。结果表明,在部分或完全饱和状态下,BlueLay可以通过渗透和吸收来减少径流量和减弱峰值流量,从而减少道路径流。这些水力特性增加了其降低洪水风险的能力。需要进一步的研究来确定BlueLay是否也能减少污染物,除了减少数量。为了确定这种材料最适合的应用,当与道路旁的其他多孔介质(如植被土壤和砾石)接触时,应测试BlueLay的性能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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