Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff

Stormwater runoff from carparks should be treated to remove pollutants before they enter urban waterways; however, differences in traffic characteristics and surrounding land use activities can result in varying first flush pollutant types and concentrations requiring specific treatment approaches....

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Main Authors: Salina Poudyal, Thomas A. Cochrane, Ricardo Bello-Mendoza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-12-01
Series:Environmental Challenges
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010021002791
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spelling doaj-33b72aa8b4684f27bd6cae3d18ba727a2021-10-05T04:21:58ZengElsevierEnvironmental Challenges2667-01002021-12-015100301Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoffSalina Poudyal0Thomas A. Cochrane1Ricardo Bello-Mendoza2Department of Civil and Natural Resources Engineering, University of Canterbury, Christchurch 8140, New ZealandCorresponding author.; Department of Civil and Natural Resources Engineering, University of Canterbury, Christchurch 8140, New ZealandDepartment of Civil and Natural Resources Engineering, University of Canterbury, Christchurch 8140, New ZealandStormwater runoff from carparks should be treated to remove pollutants before they enter urban waterways; however, differences in traffic characteristics and surrounding land use activities can result in varying first flush pollutant types and concentrations requiring specific treatment approaches. An understanding of potential variations in first flush pollutant characteristics from carparks is necessary to design adequate treatment systems. Stormwater runoff from over 20 runoff events in three different carparks (university, hospital and industrial) in Christchurch, New Zealand were thus analyzed for Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and heavy metals (Zn, Cu and Pb) over a year. Pollutant concentrations were found to vary across the carparks, which were largely driven by land use activities such as traffic count, size of the vehicles, and surrounding topography. Mean concentrations of heavy metals (both dissolved and particulate) and TSS were significantly higher in the industrial carpark than in the other two urban carparks, which had statistically similar mean pollutant concentrations. Specific ratios of metal species (Zn:Cu, and Zn:Pb) were relatively high for the industrial carpark, indicating a greater contribution from the wear and tear of large commercial vehicles. TSS and total Zn wash-off concentrations from the hospital carpark when it was non-operational (passive) were found to be significantly lower than the hospital carpark when it was operational (active), confirming that pollutant concentrations increase with vehicular activity. Rainfall characteristics such as antecedent dry days and rain intensity and duration were found to only have a low positive correlation to pollutant concentrations for all carparks. The findings from this study highlight the importance of considering carpark characteristics in the implementation of on-site stormwater treatment systems.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010021002791Heavy metalsImpervious surfacesMetal partitioningTotal suspended solidsUrban carparksRainfall characteristics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Salina Poudyal
Thomas A. Cochrane
Ricardo Bello-Mendoza
spellingShingle Salina Poudyal
Thomas A. Cochrane
Ricardo Bello-Mendoza
Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff
Environmental Challenges
Heavy metals
Impervious surfaces
Metal partitioning
Total suspended solids
Urban carparks
Rainfall characteristics
author_facet Salina Poudyal
Thomas A. Cochrane
Ricardo Bello-Mendoza
author_sort Salina Poudyal
title Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff
title_short Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff
title_full Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff
title_fullStr Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff
title_full_unstemmed Carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff
title_sort carpark pollutant yields from first flush stormwater runoff
publisher Elsevier
series Environmental Challenges
issn 2667-0100
publishDate 2021-12-01
description Stormwater runoff from carparks should be treated to remove pollutants before they enter urban waterways; however, differences in traffic characteristics and surrounding land use activities can result in varying first flush pollutant types and concentrations requiring specific treatment approaches. An understanding of potential variations in first flush pollutant characteristics from carparks is necessary to design adequate treatment systems. Stormwater runoff from over 20 runoff events in three different carparks (university, hospital and industrial) in Christchurch, New Zealand were thus analyzed for Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and heavy metals (Zn, Cu and Pb) over a year. Pollutant concentrations were found to vary across the carparks, which were largely driven by land use activities such as traffic count, size of the vehicles, and surrounding topography. Mean concentrations of heavy metals (both dissolved and particulate) and TSS were significantly higher in the industrial carpark than in the other two urban carparks, which had statistically similar mean pollutant concentrations. Specific ratios of metal species (Zn:Cu, and Zn:Pb) were relatively high for the industrial carpark, indicating a greater contribution from the wear and tear of large commercial vehicles. TSS and total Zn wash-off concentrations from the hospital carpark when it was non-operational (passive) were found to be significantly lower than the hospital carpark when it was operational (active), confirming that pollutant concentrations increase with vehicular activity. Rainfall characteristics such as antecedent dry days and rain intensity and duration were found to only have a low positive correlation to pollutant concentrations for all carparks. The findings from this study highlight the importance of considering carpark characteristics in the implementation of on-site stormwater treatment systems.
topic Heavy metals
Impervious surfaces
Metal partitioning
Total suspended solids
Urban carparks
Rainfall characteristics
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010021002791
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AT thomasacochrane carparkpollutantyieldsfromfirstflushstormwaterrunoff
AT ricardobellomendoza carparkpollutantyieldsfromfirstflushstormwaterrunoff
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