Zobrazeno 1 - 4
of 4
pro vyhledávání: '"Brian S. Lipscomb"'
Autor:
Brian S. Lipscomb, William F. Hunt, Matthew S. Lauffer, Susan Libes, Andrew H. McDaniel, Karthik Narayanaswamy, Rebecca A. Purvis, Ryan J. Winston
Publikováno v:
Water, Vol 10, Iss 2, p 134 (2018)
Standard roadside vegetated swales often do not provide consistent pollutant removal. To increase infiltration and pollutant removal, bioswales are designed with an underlying soil media and an underdrain. However, there are little data on the abilit
Autor:
Andrew H. McDaniel, William F. Hunt, Rebecca A. Purvis, Susan Libes, Ryan J. Winston, Brian S. Lipscomb, Matthew S. Lauffer, Karthik Narayanaswamy
Publikováno v:
Water
Volume 11
Issue 6
Water, Vol 11, Iss 6, p 1291 (2019)
Volume 11
Issue 6
Water, Vol 11, Iss 6, p 1291 (2019)
Bioswales are a promising stormwater control measure (SCM) for roadway runoff management, but few studies have assessed performance on a field scale. A bioswale is a vegetated channel with underlying engineered media and a perforated underdrain to pr
Autor:
Andrew H. McDaniel, Karthik Narayanaswamy, Matthew S. Lauffer, Alex J. Nice, Brian S. Lipscomb, Ryan J. Winston, William F. Hunt
Publikováno v:
Journal of Environmental Engineering. 141
Bridge deck runoff sometimes directly discharges through deck drains to water bodies. As such, the runoff is usually not treated; however, recent pressures have led Departments of Transportation to install closed pipe drainage systems beneath bridges
Autor:
Andrew H. McDaniel, Karthik Narayanaswamy, William F. Hunt, Ryan J. Winston, Brian S. Lipscomb, Matthew S. Lauffer, Alex J. Nice
Publikováno v:
World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2014.
Road runoff has been identified as a source of urban stormwater pollution. Bridges represent a special case, as they often directly discharge through deck drains near or into open water. As such, the runoff is usually not treated with a swale and fil