Water quality performance of a permeable pavement and stormwater harvesting treatment train stormwater control measure

Author:

Winston Ryan J.1,Arend Kristi2,Dorsey Jay D.3,Hunt William F.4

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering and Civil, Environmental, and Geodetic Engineering, Ohio State University, 590 Woody Hayes Drive, Room 230, Columbus, OH 43210, USA

2. Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Old Woman Creek National Estuarine Research Reserve, 2514 Cleveland Road East, Huron, OH 44839, USA

3. Research Scientist, Department of Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering, Ohio State University, 590 Woody Hayes Drive, Columbus, OH 43210, USA

4. William Neal Reynolds Distinguished Professor and Extension Specialist, Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, North Carolina State University, Box 7625, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA

Abstract

Abstract Stormwater runoff from urban development causes undesired impacts to surface waters, including discharge of pollutants, erosion, and loss of habitat. A treatment train consisting of permeable interlocking concrete pavement and underground stormwater harvesting was monitored to quantify water quality improvements. The permeable pavement provided primary treatment and the cistern contributed to final polishing of total suspended solids (TSS) and turbidity concentrations (>96%) and loads (99.5% for TSS). Because of this, >40% reduction of sediment-bound nutrient forms and total nitrogen was observed. Nitrate reduction (>70%) appeared to be related to an anaerobic zone in water stored in the scarified soil beneath the permeable pavement, allowing denitrification to occur. Sequestration of copper, lead, and zinc occurred during the first 5 months of monitoring, with leaching observed during the second half of the monitoring period. This was potentially caused by a decrease in pH within the cistern or residual chloride from deicing salt causing de-sorption of metals from accumulated sediment. Pollutant loading followed the same trends as pollutant concentrations, with load reduction improved vis-à-vis concentrations because of the 27% runoff reduction provided by the treatment train. This study has shown that permeable pavement can serve as an effective pretreatment for stormwater harvesting schemes.

Funder

United States Environmental Protection Agency

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

General Medicine

Reference61 articles.

1. Mobilisation of heavy metals by deicing salts in a roadside environment;Water Research,2004

2. Sources of pollutants in Wisconsin stormwater;Water Science and Technology,1993

3. Performance of vegetative controls for treating highway runoff;Journal of Environmental Engineering,1998

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