Illicit discharge detection in stormwater drains using an Arduino-based low-cost sensor network

Author:

Shi B.1,Catsamas S.1,Deletic B.1,Wang M.1,Bach P. M.23,Lintern A.1,Deletic A.4,McCarthy D. T.1

Affiliation:

1. BoSL Water Monitoring and Control, Department of Civil Engineering, Monash University, Wellington Rd, Clayton, Victoria 3800, Australia

2. Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science & Technology (Eawag), Überlandstrasse 133, Dübendorf 8600 ZH, Switzerland

3. Institute of Environmental Engineering, ETH Zürich, Zürich 8093, Switzerland

4. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, GPO Box 2434, Brisbane, Queensland 4001, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Illicit discharges in urban stormwater drains are a major environmental concern that deteriorate downstream waterway health. Conventional detection methods such as stormwater drain visual inspection and dye testing have fundamental drawbacks and limitations which can prevent easy location and elimination of illegal discharges in a catchment. We deployed 22 novel low-cost level, temperature and conductivity sensors across an urban catchment in Melbourne for a year to monitor the distributed drainage network, thereby detecting likely illicit discharges ranging from a transitory flow with less than 10 minutes to persistent flows lasting longer than 20 hours. We discuss rapid deployment methods, real-time data collection and online processing. The ensemble analysis of all dry weather flow data across all sites indicates that: (i) large uncertainties are associated with discharge frequency, duration, and variation in water quality within industrial and residential land uses; (ii) most dry weather discharges are intermittent and transient flows which are difficult to detect and not simply due to cross-connections with the sewerage network; (iii) detectable diurnal discharge patterns can support mitigation efforts, including policies and regulatory measures (e.g., enforcement or education) to protect receiving waterways; and, (iv) that it is possible to cost effectively isolate sources of dry weather pollution using a distributed sensor network.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Environmental Engineering

Reference31 articles.

1. URBANIZATION OF AQUATIC SYSTEMS: DEGRADATION THRESHOLDS, STORMWATER DETECTION, AND THE LIMITS OF MITIGATION

2. Bosl Water Monitoring and Control 2020 BoSL Board v0.3. Available from: http://www.bosl.com.au/wiki/BoSL_Board_v0.3 (accessed 11/12 2020).

3. Brown E., Caraco D., Pitt R. 2004 Illicit Discharge Detection and Elimination: A Guidance Manual for Program Development and Technical Assessments. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellitcott City, MD, USA.

4. Bureau of Meteorology 2020 64 km Melbourne Radar Loop. Available from: http://www.bom.gov.au/products/IDR024.loop.shtml#skip (accessed 7/10 2019).

5. Impact of dry weather discharges on annual pollution from a separate storm sewer in Toulouse, France

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