Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff

Increasing prevalence of impervious surfaces can lead to higher surface runoff and overwhelm conventional drainage systems. The limited capacity of conventional drainage systems, coupled with increased precipitation due to climate change, requires retrofitting existing infrastructure with source con...

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Main Authors: Puneeta Sreenivas, Sarah Cotterill, Fiachra O’Loughlin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:Cleaner Water
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950263225000092
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author Puneeta Sreenivas
Sarah Cotterill
Fiachra O’Loughlin
author_facet Puneeta Sreenivas
Sarah Cotterill
Fiachra O’Loughlin
author_sort Puneeta Sreenivas
collection DOAJ
description Increasing prevalence of impervious surfaces can lead to higher surface runoff and overwhelm conventional drainage systems. The limited capacity of conventional drainage systems, coupled with increased precipitation due to climate change, requires retrofitting existing infrastructure with source control Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS). In this study, a porous medium - BlueLay - was evaluated for its hydraulic performance as a potential sustainable drainage material. BlueLay was tested under various rainfall, gradient and material saturation conditions. BlueLay achieved a 100 % runoff reduction when subjected to a medium intensity storm of 98 mm/hr, and a 51 % runoff reduction when subjected to a high rainfall intensity of 179 mm/hr. Infiltration through BlueLay increased with material saturation, indicating higher runoff reduction capacity during longer duration storms. Saturation tests also indicated that BlueLay can absorb up to 4 × its weight in water. Saturated BlueLay also halved the peak runoff rate. Percolation tests suggested that 2 L of water percolated through dry BlueLay in 2 min. It took 8 min to infiltrate the same volume of water through a comparable volume of soil. Additionally, BlueLay begins to infiltrate water faster after successive periods of full saturation and drying. Results suggest that BlueLay in a state of partial or complete saturation could be used to attenuate road runoff by reducing both runoff volume and attenuating peak flow through infiltration and absorption. These hydraulic properties increase its capability to reduce flood risk. Further research is required to determine if BlueLay can also attenuate pollutants, in addition to quantity reduction. To determine the most suitable application for this material, the performance of BlueLay should be tested when interfaced with other porous media such as vegetated soil and gravel which are found next to roads.
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spelling doaj-art-9f72635dfef04199ac2b639d99bfbade2025-08-20T03:21:19ZengElsevierCleaner Water2950-26322025-06-01310007110.1016/j.clwat.2025.100071Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoffPuneeta Sreenivas0Sarah Cotterill1Fiachra O’Loughlin2Dooge Centre for Water and Water Resources Research, School of Civil Engineering, University College Dublin, Ireland; Corresponding author.Dooge Centre for Water and Water Resources Research, School of Civil Engineering, University College Dublin, IrelandDooge Centre for Water and Water Resources Research, School of Civil Engineering, University College Dublin, Ireland; UCD Earth Institute, University College Dublin, IrelandIncreasing prevalence of impervious surfaces can lead to higher surface runoff and overwhelm conventional drainage systems. The limited capacity of conventional drainage systems, coupled with increased precipitation due to climate change, requires retrofitting existing infrastructure with source control Sustainable Drainage Systems (SuDS). In this study, a porous medium - BlueLay - was evaluated for its hydraulic performance as a potential sustainable drainage material. BlueLay was tested under various rainfall, gradient and material saturation conditions. BlueLay achieved a 100 % runoff reduction when subjected to a medium intensity storm of 98 mm/hr, and a 51 % runoff reduction when subjected to a high rainfall intensity of 179 mm/hr. Infiltration through BlueLay increased with material saturation, indicating higher runoff reduction capacity during longer duration storms. Saturation tests also indicated that BlueLay can absorb up to 4 × its weight in water. Saturated BlueLay also halved the peak runoff rate. Percolation tests suggested that 2 L of water percolated through dry BlueLay in 2 min. It took 8 min to infiltrate the same volume of water through a comparable volume of soil. Additionally, BlueLay begins to infiltrate water faster after successive periods of full saturation and drying. Results suggest that BlueLay in a state of partial or complete saturation could be used to attenuate road runoff by reducing both runoff volume and attenuating peak flow through infiltration and absorption. These hydraulic properties increase its capability to reduce flood risk. Further research is required to determine if BlueLay can also attenuate pollutants, in addition to quantity reduction. To determine the most suitable application for this material, the performance of BlueLay should be tested when interfaced with other porous media such as vegetated soil and gravel which are found next to roads.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950263225000092Flood resilienceRoad runoffStormwater managementSustainable drainage systems (SuDS)
spellingShingle Puneeta Sreenivas
Sarah Cotterill
Fiachra O’Loughlin
Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff
Cleaner Water
Flood resilience
Road runoff
Stormwater management
Sustainable drainage systems (SuDS)
title Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff
title_full Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff
title_fullStr Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff
title_full_unstemmed Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff
title_short Hydraulic performance of BlueLay –a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff
title_sort hydraulic performance of bluelay a potential sustainable drainage material for mitigating urban road runoff
topic Flood resilience
Road runoff
Stormwater management
Sustainable drainage systems (SuDS)
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950263225000092
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AT sarahcotterill hydraulicperformanceofbluelayapotentialsustainabledrainagematerialformitigatingurbanroadrunoff
AT fiachraoloughlin hydraulicperformanceofbluelayapotentialsustainabledrainagematerialformitigatingurbanroadrunoff