Skip to main content

SDS develops SuDS material to tackle highway metals pollution

SDS says that its engineered treatment media Aqua-Xchange can be used in regulatory-compliant sustainable drainage systems - SuDS. Delivered to site in lightweight 1m³ bags, it can be deployed as stormwater treatment in highways drainage, as well as on other higher risk locations such as retail car parks, freight and logistics hubs. SDS claims that independent tests have shown its Aqua-Xchange removes 99% of dissolved copper and zinc, toxic metals identified by Highways England as priority pollutants
November 30, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
SDS’s Aqua-Xchange is a flexible and granular material that captures copper and zinc in surface water runoff from motorways, trunk roads and other high-traffic areas
SDS says that its engineered treatment media Aqua-Xchange can be used in regulatory-compliant sustainable drainage systems - SuDS.


Delivered to site in lightweight 1m³ bags, it can be deployed as stormwater treatment in highways drainage, as well as on other higher risk locations such as retail car parks, freight and logistics hubs.

SDS claims that independent tests have shown its Aqua-Xchange removes 99% of dissolved copper and zinc, toxic metals identified by Highways England as priority pollutants and subject to strict regulatory controls.

Aqua-Xchange was also proven to retain these metals even when applications of road salt were simulated.

It works through a combination of naturally-occurring materials that use adsorption and ionic exchange to form unbreakable bonds with the heavy metals. It captures and retains them even in heavy storms.
 
The result is “an affordable and truly versatile new SuDS material that can be used in both existing and new drainage schemes”, according to Jo Bradley, SDS market development manager and who led the development project.

Aqua-XchangeTM has a large active surface area, enabling high-performance pollutant removal in a small space. As a result, it can be used to deliver pre-treatment as part of a vegetative SuDS scheme, enabling smaller SuDS ponds or wetlands to be designed where otherwise there would have been no room for them.

In a typical application, a layer of SDS Aqua-Xchange can be added as an additional component to a linear filter drain and can be installed at a shallow depth which avoids costly excavation and use of heavy cranes.

The SDS Aqua-Xchange can also be combined with other proprietary SuDS devices. As it can filter out finer silts and sediments, it can be deployed downstream of a hydrodynamic vortex separator such as SDS’s Aqua-Swirl that targets larger particles. It can also be combined with geo-cellular storage, such as SDS’s GEOlight, when additional attenuation is needed as part of a  roadside treatment system.

Aqua-Xchange can be included as a component in vegetative SuDS devices such as dry swales, raingardens or bio-remediation zones, so that robust retention of copper and zinc is completely assured while plants can continue to thrive as part of the landscaped design.

The company says that the Aqua-Xchange was tested to reflect a range of rainfall conditions under the observation of an independent representative from a UKAS-accredited laboratory in accordance with the British Water protocol.

Related Content

  • New drainage system to cut road flooding
    July 12, 2018
    ACO is expanding its StormBrixx stormwater attenuation and infiltration range, broadening the scope of installation applications. The units are designed to assist with surface water infiltration and storage. Highly versatile, the StormBrixx system can be used in a wide array of environments as a standalone solution, or as part of an integrated sustainable urban drainage (SuDS) scheme. The latest ACO StormBrixx SD (Standard Duty) range is a general-purpose extension to the high-capacity patented plastic ge
  • Brine spraying can boost winter road safety and cut materials costs
    February 16, 2015
    A study on the use of a brine sprayer on the A8 Autobahn in Germany has yielded valuable data - *Jo Rommeswinkel writes. Since 2007, Autobahnplus Services (a+S) has been providing the operation and maintenance services on the 52km concession Autobahn A8 between Munich and Augsburg in Bavaria, a region renowned for its severe winter maintenance conditions. The Munich Augsburg section comprises 48km of six-lane dual carriageway and 4km of four-lane dual carriageway. Part of the road surface consists of low-no
  • Naylor drains away waste water concerns
    January 26, 2017
    A bespoke waste water drainage system saved time and money on a recent UK motorway scheme Work on the London’s M25 motorway Junction 30/A13 Corridor Relieving Congestion Scheme is being undertaken by joint venture contractor Balfour Beatty/Skanska. The project is valued at nearly €91 million and completion is for autumn 2016. There has been a successful continual programme of clean-up using road-sweeper/gulley cleaning trucks to remove detritus from the works areas. Disposal of this type of waste w
  • Importance of road/tunnel drainage systems
    April 10, 2012
    A variety of systems are available for quickly and efficiently removing water from roads as Patrick Smith reports The presence of water in a highway layer reduces the bearing capacity of the road, and in doing so it also reduces the structure's lifetime. Indeed, the recent extremely cold winter in many parts of Europe has shown that in colder climates there is a risk of frost damage when water is present resulting in costly potholes, so drainage systems performing properly are important in road design.