Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical Review

Sustainable drainage systems (SuDS; or best management practices) are increasingly being used as ecological engineering techniques to prevent the contamination of receiving watercourses and groundwater. Permeable paving is a SuDS technique, which is commonplace in car parks, driveways and minor road...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Miklas Scholz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-04-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
oil
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/5/2/462
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spelling doaj-2206030c945f48d5b7424dac27e192ac2020-11-24T21:26:00ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412013-04-015246247910.3390/w5020462Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical ReviewMiklas ScholzSustainable drainage systems (SuDS; or best management practices) are increasingly being used as ecological engineering techniques to prevent the contamination of receiving watercourses and groundwater. Permeable paving is a SuDS technique, which is commonplace in car parks, driveways and minor roads where one of their functions is to improve the quality of urban runoff. However, little is known about the water quality benefits of incorporating an upper geotextile within the paving structure. The review focuses on five different categories of pollutants: organic matter, nutrients, heavy metals, motor oils, suspended solids originating from street dust, and chloride. The paper critically assesses results from previous international tests and draws conclusions on the scientific rigour and significance of the data. Findings indicate that only very few studies have been undertaken to address the role of geotextiles directly. All indications are that the presence of a geotextile leads only to minor water quality improvements. For example, suspended solids are being held back by the geotextile and these solids sometimes contain organic matter, nutrients and heavy metals. However, most studies were inconclusive and data were often unsuitable for further statistical analysis. Further long-term research on industry-relevant, and statistically and scientifically sound, experimental set-ups is recommended.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/5/2/462best management practicecar parkcloggingheavy metalsoilpaving blockpollutant removalsaltsuspended solidssustainable drainage system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miklas Scholz
spellingShingle Miklas Scholz
Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical Review
Water
best management practice
car park
clogging
heavy metals
oil
paving block
pollutant removal
salt
suspended solids
sustainable drainage system
author_facet Miklas Scholz
author_sort Miklas Scholz
title Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical Review
title_short Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical Review
title_full Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical Review
title_fullStr Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical Review
title_full_unstemmed Water Quality Improvement Performance of Geotextiles Within Permeable Pavement Systems: A Critical Review
title_sort water quality improvement performance of geotextiles within permeable pavement systems: a critical review
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2013-04-01
description Sustainable drainage systems (SuDS; or best management practices) are increasingly being used as ecological engineering techniques to prevent the contamination of receiving watercourses and groundwater. Permeable paving is a SuDS technique, which is commonplace in car parks, driveways and minor roads where one of their functions is to improve the quality of urban runoff. However, little is known about the water quality benefits of incorporating an upper geotextile within the paving structure. The review focuses on five different categories of pollutants: organic matter, nutrients, heavy metals, motor oils, suspended solids originating from street dust, and chloride. The paper critically assesses results from previous international tests and draws conclusions on the scientific rigour and significance of the data. Findings indicate that only very few studies have been undertaken to address the role of geotextiles directly. All indications are that the presence of a geotextile leads only to minor water quality improvements. For example, suspended solids are being held back by the geotextile and these solids sometimes contain organic matter, nutrients and heavy metals. However, most studies were inconclusive and data were often unsuitable for further statistical analysis. Further long-term research on industry-relevant, and statistically and scientifically sound, experimental set-ups is recommended.
topic best management practice
car park
clogging
heavy metals
oil
paving block
pollutant removal
salt
suspended solids
sustainable drainage system
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/5/2/462
work_keys_str_mv AT miklasscholz waterqualityimprovementperformanceofgeotextileswithinpermeablepavementsystemsacriticalreview
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