Issue 1, 2017

Emerging investigators series: building a theory for smart stormwater systems

Abstract

Retrofitting stormwater systems with sensors and controllers will allow cities to be operated as real-time, distributed treatment plants. Unlike static infrastructure, which cannot adapt its operation to individual storms or changing land uses, “smart” stormwater systems will use system-level coordination to maximize watershed pollutant removal and treatment. We illustrate that this vision is not limited by technology, which has matured to the point at which it can be ubiquitously deployed. Rather, the challenge is much more fundamental and rooted in a system-level understanding of environmental science. Once distributed stormwater systems become highly instrumented and controlled, how should they be operated to achieve desired watershed outcomes? The answer to this question demands the development of a theoretical framework for smart stormwater systems. In this paper, we lay out the requirements for such a theory. Acknowledging that the adoption of these systems may still be years away, we also present a modeling framework to allow for the simulation of controlled stormwater systems before they become commonplace. We apply this control framework to two simulated case studies in which stormwater sites are controlled to reduce nitrate loads to downstream water bodies.

Graphical abstract: Emerging investigators series: building a theory for smart stormwater systems

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Leq 2016
Accepted
07 Dit 2016
First published
13 Dit 2016

Environ. Sci.: Water Res. Technol., 2017,3, 66-77

Emerging investigators series: building a theory for smart stormwater systems

A. Mullapudi, B. P. Wong and B. Kerkez, Environ. Sci.: Water Res. Technol., 2017, 3, 66 DOI: 10.1039/C6EW00211K

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