Difference between revisions of "Notation"
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:Ratio of catchment (A<sub>c</sub>) to the practice footprint area (A<sub>p</sub>). ''syn.'' I/P ratio. For[[green roofs]] (and often permeable paving systems) this will be 1:1. In [[bioretention]] it may be 15 or 20 to 1. | :Ratio of catchment (A<sub>c</sub>) to the practice footprint area (A<sub>p</sub>). ''syn.'' I/P ratio. For [[green roofs]] (and often permeable paving systems) this will be 1:1. In [[bioretention]] it may be 15 or 20 to 1. | ||
;R<sub>a</sub> | ;R<sub>a</sub> |
Revision as of 15:30, 4 October 2017
- Ac
- Area of the catchment, whole contributing drainage area (usually in m2).
- Ap
- Area of the practice e.g. footprint area of a bioretention cell (usually in m2)
- d
- Depth e.g. of an infiltration practice (units of length, usually m)
- L
- Length, e.g. of a reach, channel or swale (usually in m)
- m
- run of side slopes in channel cross sections (length, but usually expressed as a ratio in relation to rise. e.g. side slopes = 1:3, so m = 3)
- n
- Manning's coefficient (unitless) (Note: for clarity porosity is being expressed as 'void ratio' and sharing the notation VR
- q
- infiltration rate in (length per time, usually mm/hr) (before or after application of safety factor?)
- Qp
- Peak flow in units of volume per time (e.g. m3/s)
- R
- Ratio of catchment (Ac) to the practice footprint area (Ap). syn. I/P ratio. For green roofs (and often permeable paving systems) this will be 1:1. In bioretention it may be 15 or 20 to 1.
- Ra
- Existing rise of swale gradient (length, usually m)
- Rb
- Rise of compensation gradient for an enhanced swale (length, usually m)
- RVCT
- Runoff volume control target (as outlined by MOECC, units are mm)
- S
- Longitudinal slope (m/m, i.e. dimensionless)
- SCF
- Safety correction factor (dimensionless)
- t
- time (usually in hrs)
- VR
- Void ratio, as usually applied to aggregates and yard materials. In this guide, it is also applied to native soils in lieu of porosity (unit for both are vol/vol, i.e. dimensionless)
- y
- Depth of water (length, usually m or sometimes mm)