Difference between revisions of "Dry ponds: TTT"

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|Lined/unlined||Unlined (ideally)
|Lined/unlined||Unlined (ideally)
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|-
|Underlying soil||Choose from five, where sandy soils will drain more quickly.
|Underlying soil||Choose from five; sandy soils will drain more quickly.
|-  
|-  
|Evaporation factor||?
|Evaporation factor||?

Revision as of 15:12, 29 September 2017

TTT.png

Dry ponds are found in storage element in the LID TTT.
The largest area is at the top, level 0 m; each subsequent lower depth has a smaller area

Dry ponds are a storage element in the Treatment Train Tool.

A Dry pond as a storage element (key parameters)
Stage Storage
Name Important to have a unique name, to connect it with the catchment area
Storage type Dry detention ponds
Bottom elevation (m) This is important to correspond with other components, e.g. when the overflow is coupled to another BMP within a treatment train
Maximum depth (m)
Lined/unlined Unlined (ideally)
Underlying soil Choose from five; sandy soils will drain more quickly.
Evaporation factor ?
Suction head (mm) ?
Saturated conductivity (mm/hr) ?
Initial soil moisture deficit (fraction) ?
Curves
The Curves table is designed to accommodate the side slopes. The top line begins at 0 m, with subsequent depths in the following lines.