Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/131215
Title: Permeable Pavement Hydraulic Conductivity Indices for Rainfall-Runoff and Particulate Matter Loadings
Authors: Marchioni, Mariana
Raimondi, Anita
Andres Valeri, Valerio Carlos 
Becciu, Gianfranco
Sansalone, John
UNESCO Clasification: 330506 Ingeniería civil
Keywords: Clogging
Darcy
Falling-head permeameter
Filtration
Permeable pavement (PP), et al
Issue Date: 2021
Journal: Journal of Environmental Engineering, ASCE 
Abstract: Permeable pavement (PP) can be a primary source-area component of a sustainable drainage system. PP facilitates runoff reduction and particulate matter (PM) separation. PM separated by the PP surface reduces hydraulic conductivity (K) and influences PP functionality and maintenance. Pragmatic and reproducible methods are necessary to identify K reduction and maintenance. Because K is the proportionality constant between specific discharge and hydraulic gradient (Darcy's law), disparate test methods and conditions produce disparate K results. Consequently, evaluations based solely on K can lack guidance when the goal is runoff reduction. Herein, PP response is examined based on K, outflow time (OT) through the PP across a fixed driving head range, and volumetric runoff coefficient (C). The PP test matrix parameters are (1) total porosity from 0.15 to 0.25, (2) rainfall loading from 0 to 150 mm/h, (3) PM aerial loads from 0.5 to 2.0 kg/m2 as a silty-sand schmutzdecke, (4) slopes from 2.5% to 7.0%, and (5) PP maintenance. Results demonstrate (1) higher PM aerial loads increase OT (K decreases), (2) higher total porosity decreases OT (K increases), and (3) higher rain rates inconsistently produce lower OT compared with the no-rainfall control at higher PM aerial loads. For all tests (N=285) with C measurements, lumping all other parameters, the mean C is 0.07, the standard deviation is 0.11, and the maximum is 0.67. These C results are significantly lower than impervious pavements. As the PP slopes and PM aerial loads increased, C increased and K decreased but with no clear trend between K and C. For tests where K<0.01 mm/s and OT<300 s, C was <0.35. An OT limit of 300 s provides guidance for PP conditions that provide runoff reduction, with C<0.20 for 2.0% slopes. PP conditions in this limit provide discernable runoff reduction. OT and C can be pragmatic adjuvants with disparate K methods.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/131215
ISSN: 0733-9372
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)EE.1943-7870.0001937
Source: Journal of Environmental Engineering, ASCE [0733-9372], v. 147, n. 12 (Octubre 2021)
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