Schematic showing an infiltration basin, which is one of several stormwater control practices designed to infiltrate stormwater runoff. Infiltration practices capture stormwater runoff and allow it to infiltrate into the underlying soil. Pollutant removal occurs through a variety of mechanisms, including adsorption, absorption, plant uptake, and degradation. Note that inflow into the practice has undergone pretreatment and that once the practice is filled, runoff bypasses the practice rather than entering it.
Stormwater infiltration constraints - hover above a circle for text. Click on the link in the circle to go to the associated page in the manual.
This page contains links to several pages that address infiltration of stormwater runoff. Link to portal for Infiltration Practices.
Potential research topics or better guidance (for January 19 webinar)
- Long-term effects of perennial vegetation and soil biology on infiltration in stormwater practices
- Dynamic infiltration (Villanova)
- Road salt and effects of chloride (groundwater) and sodium (soil structure)
- Maintenance and long-term infiltration (design phase maintenance)
- Pretreatment's role in infiltration
- Potential groundwater impacts from infiltration in soils with limited organic matter and high infiltration rates, such as underground practices