Nutrient infiltrate concentrations from three permeable pavement types

Journal of Environmental Management
Robert A Brown, Michael Borst

Abstract

While permeable pavement is increasingly being used to control stormwater runoff, field-based, side-by-side investigations on the effects different pavement types have on nutrient concentrations present in stormwater runoff are limited. In 2009, the U.S. EPA constructed a 0.4-ha parking lot in Edison, New Jersey, that incorporated permeable interlocking concrete pavement (PICP), pervious concrete (PC), and porous asphalt (PA). Each permeable pavement type has four, 54.9-m(2), lined sections that direct all infiltrate into 5.7-m(3) tanks enabling complete volume collection and sampling. This paper highlights the results from a 12-month period when samples were collected from 13 rainfall/runoff events and analyzed for nitrogen species, orthophosphate, and organic carbon. Differences in infiltrate concentrations among the three permeable pavement types were assessed and compared with concentrations in rainwater samples and impervious asphalt runoff samples, which were collected as controls. Contrary to expectations based on the literature, the PA infiltrate had significantly larger total nitrogen (TN) concentrations than runoff and infiltrate from the other two permeable pavement types, indicating that nitrogen leached from materi...Continue Reading

References

Sep 27, 2003·Water Research·Benjamin O Brattebo, Derek B Booth

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Citations

Apr 13, 2020·Environmental Science and Pollution Research International·Andrew TirpakJay D Dorsey
Jul 22, 2017·Environmental Science and Pollution Research International·Haiyan LiZiyang Zhang
May 1, 2017·Journal of Sustainable Water in the Built Environment·Thomas P O'Connor
May 10, 2020·Water Science and Technology : a Journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research·Hui LuoYin Wang
Mar 29, 2019·The Science of the Total Environment·Mostafa Razzaghmanesh, Michael Borst
Jan 1, 2018·Journal of Hydrology·Mostafa Razzaghmanesh, Michael Borst
Aug 25, 2020·The Science of the Total Environment·Lu-Ming ChenPaul Davidson
Jun 4, 2019·The Science of the Total Environment·Carmen Hernández-CrespoIgnacio Andrés-Doménech
Apr 30, 2018··Thomas P. O’ConnorMichael Borst

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