Hydraulic Performance Of Permeable Asphalt And Picp In Swmm, Validated By Laboratory Data
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Date
2019Author
Almandoz Berrondo, Jabier
Andrés-Doménech, Ignacio
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WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment 238 : 569-579 (2019)
Abstract
Traditional urban development practices disrupt the natural water cycle, increasing surface runoff
volume/velocity and reducing water quality, amongst other impacts. Those negative impacts can be
reduced adopting sustainable urban drainage system (SUDS) techniques, such as pervious pavements.
porous asphalt (PA) and permeable interlocking clay/concrete pavers (PICP) are two types of pervious
pavements. Both are similar to traditional asphalt and pavers, but superficial layer has a high porosity
for allowing infiltration of rain, and base/subbase layers contain a high void fraction to allow water
retention. In order to analyse these types of pavements and assess how they affect the general urban
stormwater network, the SWMM model has been widely used. Even so, more confidence in the selected
parameters is needed, especially when modelling homogeneous areas by means of low impact
development (LID) units. To do so, laboratory tests have been implemented using a rainfall simulator,
testing PICP/PA materials under different slopes (1% and 6%) and rain conditions (35 mm/h and
70 mm/h), and infiltrated water was measured for each layer independently. This paper validates, using
the aforementioned laboratory data, the parameters needed for modelling PA and PICP in SWMM, as
well as differences between them, showing that SWMM is a convenient tool to model single events on
permeable pavements for regular storms.