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Review of urban stormwater quality models: Deterministic, stochastic, and hybrid approaches

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION
Volume 43, Issue 6, Pages 1508-1523

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-1688.2007.00124.x

Keywords

nonpoint source pollution; runoff; water quality; stochastic models; stormwater modeling

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The growing impact of urban stormwater on surface-water quality has illuminated the need for more accurate modeling of stormwater pollution. Water quality based regulation and the movement towards integrated urban water management place a similar demand for improved stormwater quality model predictions. The physical, chemical, and biological processes that affect stormwater quality need to be better understood and simulated, while acknowledging the costs and benefits that such complex modeling entails. This paper reviews three approaches to stormwater quality modeling: deterministic, stochastic, and hybrid. Six deterministic, three stochastic, and three hybrid models are reviewed in detail. Hybrid approaches show strong potential for reducing stormwater quality model prediction error and uncertainty. Improved stormwater quality models will have wide ranging benefits for combined sewer overflow management, total maximum daily load development, best management practice design, land use change impact assessment, water quality trading, and integrated modeling.

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