Water (Apr 2019)

The Effectiveness of Exfiltration Technology to Support Sponge City Objectives

  • Edward McBean,
  • Gordon Huang,
  • Aili Yang,
  • Huiyan Cheng,
  • Yicheng Wu,
  • Zheng Liu,
  • Zhineng Dai,
  • Haiyan Fu,
  • Munir Bhatti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w11040723
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
p. 723

Abstract

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Urban stormwater management is essential to improve the management of floodwaters in municipalities in urban areas. However, relying on sponge city options for site planning in an attempt to decrease the impacts of flooding is challenging due to the magnitude of flooding in urban China. The merits of exfiltration technology being used in Canada are described as having significant potential; this technology encourages passage from the stormwater pipe down to a second, lower pipe, to facilitate exfiltration to the vadose zone and, ultimately, to replenish groundwater. For example, for a small urban catchment, stormwater runoff from a 2-h long, 5-yearly storm, is demonstrated as being able to exfiltrate approximately 53% of the stormwater. Overall, the potential exists to exfiltrate stormwater from the lower pipe and it is estimated that 71% of the water entering the storm sewer is exfiltrated to the vadose zone, for a small catchment. The exfiltration pipe technology increases groundwater recharge which provides an opportunity to help manage subsidence in China. However, attention must be paid to the quality of the infiltrating water since, as true for any sponge city initiative, poor quality infiltrating water may deteriorate the quality of the groundwater.

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