Investigation and Demonstration of Turbidity Reduction in Stormwater Runoff for Oklahoma Highway Construction Sites
The Environmental protection Agency (USEPA) has issued new requirements on the construction industry to control the discharge of pollutants from the sites. The construction effluent guidelines or ELG’s require construction sites to reduce the pollutant discharge to ‘maximum extent practicable’ and comply with the Clean Water Act. Sediment is the primary pollutant in a construction site effluent runoff. It is mainly composed of large amounts of fine silt, clay and colloidal particles. These particles have low settling velocities and remain in suspension for long durations and therefore cannot be trapped effectively in conventional best management practices (BMPs) like detention ponds, grass lined channels, sedimentation basins that rely on gravity for settling. The trapping efficiencies of the particles can be enhanced by flocculation, where addition of the flocculant to the sediment discharge would bind multiple particles together, increasing them in size and increasing the settling velocity. Construction sites often experience space restrictions and therefore a modular sediment trapping system based on flocculation would require much less space compared to a settling pond especially in those regions which have high clay content in their soil, which is commonly found in state of Oklahoma. The following report presents the improved design for the passive flocculent and mixing devices. The report also includes all the experimental data collected with the flume experiments performed on the five soils from the state of Oklahoma namely Port A and Port B, Kamie B, Stephenville B and Norge B soils. The values of the flocculation constants associated with each soil are presented. Additionally, field tests on a field with Port soils are presented.
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Corporate Authors:
Oklahoma State University, Stillwater
Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering
111 Ag Hall
Stillwater, OK United States 74078Oklahoma Department of Transportation
Planning and Research Division, 200 N.E. 21st Street, Room 3A7
Oklahoma City, OK United States 73105Federal Highway Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Authors:
- Vogel, Jason R
- Storm, Daniel E
- Barfield, Billy J
- Harp, Sam
- Bhadbhade, Neha
- Mittelstet, Aaron
- McLemore, Alex
- Rogers, Brad
- Neupane, Sagar
- Garbrecht, Karl
- Publication Date: 2013-12
Language
- English
Media Info
- Media Type: Digital/other
- Edition: Final Report
- Features: Figures; Photos; References; Tables;
- Pagination: 525p
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Construction sites; Effluents; Environmental protection; Field tests; Flocculating agents; Runoff; Suspended sediments; Turbidity
- Geographic Terms: Oklahoma
- Subject Areas: Construction; Environment; Highways; Hydraulics and Hydrology;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01611986
- Record Type: Publication
- Report/Paper Numbers: FHWA-OK- 13-13
- Contract Numbers: ODOT SP&R ITEM NUMBER 2237
- Files: TRIS, ATRI, USDOT, STATEDOT
- Created Date: Sep 26 2016 11:04AM