Urban sediment transport through an established vegetated swale: long term treatment efficiencies and deposition

Allen, D., Olive, V. , Arthur, S. and Haynes, H. (2015) Urban sediment transport through an established vegetated swale: long term treatment efficiencies and deposition. Water, 7(12), pp. 1046-1067. (doi: 10.3390/w7031046)

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Abstract

Vegetated swales are an accepted and commonly implemented sustainable urban drainage system in the built urban environment. Laboratory and field research has defined the effectiveness of a vegetated swale in sediment detention during a single rainfall-runoff event. Event mean concentrations of suspended and bed load sediment have been calculated using current best analytical practice, providing single runoff event specific sediment conveyance volumes through the swale. However, mass and volume of sediment build up within a swale over time is not yet well defined. This paper presents an effective field sediment tracing methodology and analysis that determines the quantity of sediment deposited within a swale during initial and successive runoff events. The use of the first order decay rate constant, k, as an effective pollutant treatment parameter is considered in detail. Through monitoring tagged sediment deposition within the swale, the quantity of sediment that is re-suspended, conveyed, re-deposited or transported out of the swale as a result of multiple runoff events is illustrated. Sediment is found to continue moving through the vegetated swale after initial deposition, with ongoing discharge resulting from resuspension and conveyance during subsequent runoff events. The majority of sediment initially deposited within a swale is not detained long term or throughout its design life of the swale.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Olive, Dr Valerie
Authors: Allen, D., Olive, V., Arthur, S., and Haynes, H.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre
Journal Name:Water
Publisher:MDPI
ISSN:2073-4441
ISSN (Online):2073-4441
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2015 The Authors
First Published:First published in Water 7(12):1046-1067
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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