Stormwater biofilter treatment model (MPiRe) for selected micro-pollutants
Abstract
Biofiltration systems, also known as bioretentions or rain-gardens, are widely used for treatment of stormwater. In order to design them well, it is important to improve models that can predict their performance. This paper presents a rare model that can simulate removal of a wide range of micro pollutants from stormwater by biofilters. The model is based on (1) a bucket approach for water flow simulation, and (2) advection/dispersion transport equations for pollutant transport and fate. The latter includes chemical non-equilibrium two-site model of sorption, first-order decay, and volatilization, thus is a compromise between the limited availability of data (on stormwater micro-pollutants) and the required complexity to accurately describe the nature of the phenomenon. The model was calibrated and independently validated on two field data series collected for different organic micro-pollutants at two biofilters of different design. This included data on triazines (atrazine, prometryn,... and simazine), glyphosate, and chloroform during six simulated stormwater events. The data included variable and challenging biofilter operational conditions; e.g. variable inflow volumes, dry and wet period dynamics, and inflow pollutant concentrations. The model was able to simulate water flow well, with slight discrepancies being observed only during long dry periods when, presumably, soil cracking occurred. In general, the agreement between simulated and measured pollutographs was good. As with flows, the long dry periods posed a problem for water quality simulation (e.g. simazine and prometryn were difficult to model in low inflow events that followed prolonged dry periods). However, it was encouraging that pollutant transport and fate parameters estimated by the model calibration were in agreement with available literature data. This suggests that the model could probably be adopted for assessment of biofilter performance of other stormwater micro-pollutants (PAHs, phenols, phthalates, etc.). The model, therefore, could be applied in practice for sizing of biofilter systems and their validation monitoring, when used for stormwater harvesting.
Keywords:
Stormwater biofilter / Micro-pollutant modelling / Triazines / Glyphosate / ChloroformSource:
Water Research, 2016, 89, 180-191Publisher:
- Elsevier Ltd
Funding / projects:
- Cooperative Research Centre for Water Sensitive Cities E04105
- Urban Drainage Systems as Key Infrastructure in Cities and Towns (RS-37010)
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2015.11.046
ISSN: 0043-1354
PubMed: 26650452
WoS: 000368951000018
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84949035056
Collections
Institution/Community
GraFarTY - JOUR AU - Ranđelović, Anja AU - Zhang, Kefeng AU - Jaćimović, Nenad AU - McCarthy, David AU - Deletić, Ana PY - 2016 UR - https://grafar.grf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/781 AB - Biofiltration systems, also known as bioretentions or rain-gardens, are widely used for treatment of stormwater. In order to design them well, it is important to improve models that can predict their performance. This paper presents a rare model that can simulate removal of a wide range of micro pollutants from stormwater by biofilters. The model is based on (1) a bucket approach for water flow simulation, and (2) advection/dispersion transport equations for pollutant transport and fate. The latter includes chemical non-equilibrium two-site model of sorption, first-order decay, and volatilization, thus is a compromise between the limited availability of data (on stormwater micro-pollutants) and the required complexity to accurately describe the nature of the phenomenon. The model was calibrated and independently validated on two field data series collected for different organic micro-pollutants at two biofilters of different design. This included data on triazines (atrazine, prometryn, and simazine), glyphosate, and chloroform during six simulated stormwater events. The data included variable and challenging biofilter operational conditions; e.g. variable inflow volumes, dry and wet period dynamics, and inflow pollutant concentrations. The model was able to simulate water flow well, with slight discrepancies being observed only during long dry periods when, presumably, soil cracking occurred. In general, the agreement between simulated and measured pollutographs was good. As with flows, the long dry periods posed a problem for water quality simulation (e.g. simazine and prometryn were difficult to model in low inflow events that followed prolonged dry periods). However, it was encouraging that pollutant transport and fate parameters estimated by the model calibration were in agreement with available literature data. This suggests that the model could probably be adopted for assessment of biofilter performance of other stormwater micro-pollutants (PAHs, phenols, phthalates, etc.). The model, therefore, could be applied in practice for sizing of biofilter systems and their validation monitoring, when used for stormwater harvesting. PB - Elsevier Ltd T2 - Water Research T1 - Stormwater biofilter treatment model (MPiRe) for selected micro-pollutants EP - 191 SP - 180 VL - 89 DO - 10.1016/j.watres.2015.11.046 ER -
@article{ author = "Ranđelović, Anja and Zhang, Kefeng and Jaćimović, Nenad and McCarthy, David and Deletić, Ana", year = "2016", abstract = "Biofiltration systems, also known as bioretentions or rain-gardens, are widely used for treatment of stormwater. In order to design them well, it is important to improve models that can predict their performance. This paper presents a rare model that can simulate removal of a wide range of micro pollutants from stormwater by biofilters. The model is based on (1) a bucket approach for water flow simulation, and (2) advection/dispersion transport equations for pollutant transport and fate. The latter includes chemical non-equilibrium two-site model of sorption, first-order decay, and volatilization, thus is a compromise between the limited availability of data (on stormwater micro-pollutants) and the required complexity to accurately describe the nature of the phenomenon. The model was calibrated and independently validated on two field data series collected for different organic micro-pollutants at two biofilters of different design. This included data on triazines (atrazine, prometryn, and simazine), glyphosate, and chloroform during six simulated stormwater events. The data included variable and challenging biofilter operational conditions; e.g. variable inflow volumes, dry and wet period dynamics, and inflow pollutant concentrations. The model was able to simulate water flow well, with slight discrepancies being observed only during long dry periods when, presumably, soil cracking occurred. In general, the agreement between simulated and measured pollutographs was good. As with flows, the long dry periods posed a problem for water quality simulation (e.g. simazine and prometryn were difficult to model in low inflow events that followed prolonged dry periods). However, it was encouraging that pollutant transport and fate parameters estimated by the model calibration were in agreement with available literature data. This suggests that the model could probably be adopted for assessment of biofilter performance of other stormwater micro-pollutants (PAHs, phenols, phthalates, etc.). The model, therefore, could be applied in practice for sizing of biofilter systems and their validation monitoring, when used for stormwater harvesting.", publisher = "Elsevier Ltd", journal = "Water Research", title = "Stormwater biofilter treatment model (MPiRe) for selected micro-pollutants", pages = "191-180", volume = "89", doi = "10.1016/j.watres.2015.11.046" }
Ranđelović, A., Zhang, K., Jaćimović, N., McCarthy, D.,& Deletić, A.. (2016). Stormwater biofilter treatment model (MPiRe) for selected micro-pollutants. in Water Research Elsevier Ltd., 89, 180-191. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2015.11.046
Ranđelović A, Zhang K, Jaćimović N, McCarthy D, Deletić A. Stormwater biofilter treatment model (MPiRe) for selected micro-pollutants. in Water Research. 2016;89:180-191. doi:10.1016/j.watres.2015.11.046 .
Ranđelović, Anja, Zhang, Kefeng, Jaćimović, Nenad, McCarthy, David, Deletić, Ana, "Stormwater biofilter treatment model (MPiRe) for selected micro-pollutants" in Water Research, 89 (2016):180-191, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2015.11.046 . .