A two-stage storage routing model for green roof runoff detention
Author(s) -
Gianni Vesuviano,
Fred Sonnenwald,
Virginia Stovin
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
water science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.406
H-Index - 137
eISSN - 1996-9732
pISSN - 0273-1223
DOI - 10.2166/wst.2013.808
Subject(s) - green roof , surface runoff , roof , environmental science , drainage , substrate (aquarium) , drainage system (geomorphology) , stormwater , stage (stratigraphy) , hydrology (agriculture) , runoff curve number , low impact development , engineering , geotechnical engineering , civil engineering , geology , stormwater management , ecology , paleontology , oceanography , biology
Green roofs have been adopted in urban drainage systems to control the total quantity and volumetric flow rate of runoff. Modern green roof designs are multi-layered, their main components being vegetation, substrate and, in almost all cases, a separate drainage layer. Most current hydrological models of green roofs combine the modelling of the separate layers into a single process; these models have limited predictive capability for roofs not sharing the same design. An adaptable, generic, two-stage model for a system consisting of a granular substrate over a hard plastic 'egg box'-style drainage layer and fibrous protection mat is presented. The substrate and drainage layer/protection mat are modelled separately by previously verified sub-models. Controlled storm events are applied to a green roof system in a rainfall simulator. The time-series modelled runoff is compared to the monitored runoff for each storm event. The modelled runoff profiles are accurate (mean Rt(2) = 0.971), but further characterization of the substrate component is required for the model to be generically applicable to other roof configurations with different substrate.
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