Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 21 segundos...
Inicio  /  Infrastructures  /  Vol: 3 Par: 4 (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Beneficial Uses of Dredged Material in Green Infrastructure and Living Architecture to Improve Resilience of Lake Erie

Shruti Bhairappanavar    
Rui Liu and Reid Coffman    

Resumen

To maintain the navigational depth, 1.15 million cubic meters (1.5 million cubic yards) of sediment is dredged out from the federal harbors every year from Lake Erie, Ohio Coast. Treating this huge amount of dredged material is a major challenge due to the mobilization of potential contaminants causing depreciation in water quality and depletion of valuable land. Rather than treating the dredged material as a waste, we suggest investigating alternative ways to recycle and reuse the material within Green Infrastructure (GI) and living architecture applications. This study identifies potential applications of the dredged material in bioretention and vegetative roof systems, and examines the role of dredged material in these edaphic conditions. The paper discusses the beneficial uses of dredged material in GI by investigating the quality of dredged material and performances of GI built using dredged material through laboratory and field-testing. Preliminary results of a growth media using dredged material for the vegetative roof have been developed in lab/field studies that possess the performance values comparable to the current commercial product. The growth media containing lightweight aggregate, made from the dredged material, is observed to have high water retention capacity and high unit weight in comparison to a commercial product. The growth media leachate water test demonstrated the water quality to be comparable to the drained water from the commercial product. The growth media overwintered and advanced a rare plant species, Viola pedatifida, which is similar to conventional media. The beneficial uses of dredged material in the GI will help maintain the economic viability of harbors and ports along the shoreline of Lake Erie in Ohio and GIs, which were built using dredged material that can help address storm water management issues in urban areas due to extensive impervious surfaces.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Habib Hussain Zuberi, Songzuo Liu, Muhammad Bilal, Ayman Alharbi, Amar Jaffar, Syed Agha Hussnain Mohsan, Abdulaziz Miyajan and Mohsin Abrar Khan    
The excavation of the ocean has led to the submersion of numerous autonomous vehicles and sensors. Hence, there is a growing need for multi-user underwater acoustic communication. On the other hand, due to the limited bandwidth of the underwater acoustic... ver más

 
Dongsuk Kim, Majid Asli and Klaus Höschler    
As the issue of pollutant emissions from aviation propulsion escalates, research into alternative powertrains is gaining momentum. Two promising technologies are the Hybrid Electric Propulsion System (HEPS) and Pressure Gain Combustion (PGC). HEPS is exp... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Konstantinos V. Kostas and Maria Manousaridou    
In this work, supervised Machine Learning (ML) techniques were employed to solve the forward and inverse problems of airfoil and hydrofoil design. The forward problem pertains to the prediction of a foil?s aerodynamic or hydrodynamic performance given it... ver más

 
Ankita Dhar, Himadri Mukherjee, Shibaprasad Sen, Md Obaidullah Sk, Amitabha Biswas, Teresa Gonçalves and Kaushik Roy    
Author identification is an important aspect of literary analysis, studied in natural language processing (NLP). It aids identify the most probable author of articles, news texts or social media comments and tweets, for example. It can be applied to othe... ver más
Revista: Future Internet

 
Zhen Liu, Xuemei Liu, Songlin Xie, Junhai Wang and Xiuyun Zhou    
Analog circuits play an essential role in electronic systems. To strengthen the reliability of sophisticated electronic circuits, this paper proposes a novel analog circuit fault diagnosis method. Compared with traditional fault diagnosis, the fault diag... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences