Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater Infiltration

Properties of constructed soils determine the functioning of nature-based solutions, such as stormwater bioretention beds. Water infiltration, colloid transport and heat transport in the soil layer are affected by changes in pore system geometry of the biofilter layer particularly due to the develop...

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Main Authors: Michal Snehota, Petra Heckova, John Koestel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Proceedings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/30/1/85
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spelling doaj-7c8cb9ca27224e0c95d9c90da4ffe81f2020-11-25T03:47:03ZengMDPI AGProceedings2504-39002020-06-0130858510.3390/proceedings2019030085Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater InfiltrationMichal Snehota0Petra Heckova1John Koestel2Faculty of Civil Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague, 166 29 Prague, Czech RepublicUniversity Centre for Energy Efficient Buildings, Czech Technical University in Prague, 273 43 Bustehrad, Czech RepublicDepartment of Soil and Environment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 750 07Uppsala, SwedenProperties of constructed soils determine the functioning of nature-based solutions, such as stormwater bioretention beds. Water infiltration, colloid transport and heat transport in the soil layer are affected by changes in pore system geometry of the biofilter layer particularly due to the development of macropores and by clogging of pores by particles. The rate of alterations is often faster than in natural soils due to higher loads of particles as well due to frequent variations of the water content. In the presented study we assess the temporal changes of soil structure of biofilter layer of the experimental bioretention beds by conducting field-scale experiments and noninvasive diagnostics of soil cores. The aim is to relate changes in bioretention cell performance to the structural changes of biofilter soil. Two identical experimental bioretention cells were constructed in December 2017. The first bioretention cell collects the stormwater from the roof of the nearby experimental building (roof area 38 m<sup>2</sup>). The second bioretention cell is supplied from a tank using a controlled pump system, which allows generating of artificial rainfall-runoff episodes. The bioretention were planted in July 2018 by four perennial plants (<i>Aster novae-angliae</i> “Purple Dome”; <i>Hemerocallis</i> ‘Lemon Bells’; <i>Euphorbia amygdaloides</i>; <i>Molinia caerulea</i>). Bioretention cells are instrumented with water content probes, tensiometers, water potential meters. Outflow from the bioretention cell is monitored by tipping buckets. Small undisturbed samples were collected from the biofilter layer before and after the first vegetation season and examined by X-ray micro computed tomography (CT). Image analysis involved segmentation of the macropore network and calculation of the properties of the pore system. The analysis of X-ray CT imaging demonstrates the significant decrease of macroporosity during the first vegetation season. The outcomes of the research will lead to improved design and management procedures for and bioretention beds.https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/30/1/85bioretentionmacroporesX-ray tomographyconstructed soilinfiltration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michal Snehota
Petra Heckova
John Koestel
spellingShingle Michal Snehota
Petra Heckova
John Koestel
Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater Infiltration
Proceedings
bioretention
macropores
X-ray tomography
constructed soil
infiltration
author_facet Michal Snehota
Petra Heckova
John Koestel
author_sort Michal Snehota
title Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater Infiltration
title_short Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater Infiltration
title_full Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater Infiltration
title_fullStr Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater Infiltration
title_full_unstemmed Early Structural Changes of Constructed Soils in Bioretention Bed for Stormwater Infiltration
title_sort early structural changes of constructed soils in bioretention bed for stormwater infiltration
publisher MDPI AG
series Proceedings
issn 2504-3900
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Properties of constructed soils determine the functioning of nature-based solutions, such as stormwater bioretention beds. Water infiltration, colloid transport and heat transport in the soil layer are affected by changes in pore system geometry of the biofilter layer particularly due to the development of macropores and by clogging of pores by particles. The rate of alterations is often faster than in natural soils due to higher loads of particles as well due to frequent variations of the water content. In the presented study we assess the temporal changes of soil structure of biofilter layer of the experimental bioretention beds by conducting field-scale experiments and noninvasive diagnostics of soil cores. The aim is to relate changes in bioretention cell performance to the structural changes of biofilter soil. Two identical experimental bioretention cells were constructed in December 2017. The first bioretention cell collects the stormwater from the roof of the nearby experimental building (roof area 38 m<sup>2</sup>). The second bioretention cell is supplied from a tank using a controlled pump system, which allows generating of artificial rainfall-runoff episodes. The bioretention were planted in July 2018 by four perennial plants (<i>Aster novae-angliae</i> “Purple Dome”; <i>Hemerocallis</i> ‘Lemon Bells’; <i>Euphorbia amygdaloides</i>; <i>Molinia caerulea</i>). Bioretention cells are instrumented with water content probes, tensiometers, water potential meters. Outflow from the bioretention cell is monitored by tipping buckets. Small undisturbed samples were collected from the biofilter layer before and after the first vegetation season and examined by X-ray micro computed tomography (CT). Image analysis involved segmentation of the macropore network and calculation of the properties of the pore system. The analysis of X-ray CT imaging demonstrates the significant decrease of macroporosity during the first vegetation season. The outcomes of the research will lead to improved design and management procedures for and bioretention beds.
topic bioretention
macropores
X-ray tomography
constructed soil
infiltration
url https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/30/1/85
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