TY - GEN
T1 - Treatability of organic emerging toxicants in urban stormwater runoff
AU - Pitt, Robert
AU - Clark, Shirley E.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Bioretention has been promoted as a stormwater management technique that can reduce the loads of solids, heavy metals, and nutrients to surface waters. Many researchers have reported the treatment effectiveness of bioretention both in terms of percent removal and periodically in terms of effluent concentration. No studies, however, have evaluated the ability of carefully-selected bioretention media to treat pollutants to meet specific permit limits for certain organic toxicants and radionuclides. This project focused on the selection of a bioretention media mixture from pre-selected components - a granular activated carbon (GAC), two zeolites, two sands, and a peat moss - with the goal of treating numerous constituents, including dioxins, mercury, perchlorate, oil and grease, and radioactive components, along with numerous conventional constituents, to numeric permit limits. Two series of column tests, one focusing on long-term pollutant removal behavior and the other on the effect of depth/contact time on removal and using stormwater as the base test fluid, showed that a bioretention media containing a virgin coconut-hull granular activated carbon (GAC) was able to treat these constituents to the very low permit limits under a wide range of likely site conditions.
AB - Bioretention has been promoted as a stormwater management technique that can reduce the loads of solids, heavy metals, and nutrients to surface waters. Many researchers have reported the treatment effectiveness of bioretention both in terms of percent removal and periodically in terms of effluent concentration. No studies, however, have evaluated the ability of carefully-selected bioretention media to treat pollutants to meet specific permit limits for certain organic toxicants and radionuclides. This project focused on the selection of a bioretention media mixture from pre-selected components - a granular activated carbon (GAC), two zeolites, two sands, and a peat moss - with the goal of treating numerous constituents, including dioxins, mercury, perchlorate, oil and grease, and radioactive components, along with numerous conventional constituents, to numeric permit limits. Two series of column tests, one focusing on long-term pollutant removal behavior and the other on the effect of depth/contact time on removal and using stormwater as the base test fluid, showed that a bioretention media containing a virgin coconut-hull granular activated carbon (GAC) was able to treat these constituents to the very low permit limits under a wide range of likely site conditions.
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U2 - 10.1061/41173(414)46
DO - 10.1061/41173(414)46
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:79960392084
SN - 9780784411735
T3 - World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2011: Bearing Knowledge for Sustainability - Proceedings of the 2011 World Environmental and Water Resources Congress
SP - 428
EP - 440
BT - World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2011
T2 - World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2011: Bearing Knowledge for Sustainability
Y2 - 22 May 2011 through 26 May 2011
ER -