Illinois Administrative Code
Title 35 - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Part 570 - DESIGN AND MAINTENANCE CRITERIA REGARDING RUNOFF FIELD APPLICATION SYSTEMS
Subpart B - DESIGN CRITERIA
Section 570.204 - Component Design Criteria
Universal Citation: 35 IL Admin Code ยง 570.204
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Settling Basin
1) Basin volume shall be 4.5
cubic feet per 100 square feet of area contributing runoff plus an additional
10% volume safety factor.
2) Ramp
slope shall not be steeper than 12:1 (H:V), with 15:1 being
preferred.
3) Basin depth shall be
2 to 4 feet.
4) Settling basins
located where groundwater tables rise to within 2 feet of the surface shall be
provided with foundation drainage.
5) The settling basin riser pipe should be 18
to 24 inches in diameter with vertical slots 1 inch by 4 inches high spaced at
120° intervals around the pipe. There should be 6 slots per foot of height
with the bottom row of slots even with the settling basin floor. To avoid
excess clogging, offset or locate the riser pipe as far as practicable from the
inlet of the settling basin and attach 3/4 inch mesh expanded metal screen
cover over the top of the riser pipe. Provide a 3/4 inch mesh expanded metal
screen ahead of the riser pipe so that all runoff entering the riser pipe must
first cross the screen. Refer to Appendix I for a diagram.
6) The settling basin ramp, floor, end-wall,
and side-walls should be designed, constructed, and maintained to withstand
normal operation practices involving power machinery.
b) Effluent Transport System
1) Pressurized effluent transport systems
shall be designed by normal engineering hydraulic considerations including but
not limited to static head, friction losses, flow velocity, and pipe
diameter.
2) Gravity flow effluent
transport systems may be designed as pipes flowing full or as open channels.
Design velocity shall be 2 feet per second or greater to prevent solids
deposition. Minimum pipe capacity shall equal or exceed the design flow rate
(Qf) over the field application area. The design feedlot runoff volume (VR)
shall be calculated by Appendix B. Design flow rate (Qf) can be obtained from
Appendix G.
3) Closed pipes used
for effluent transport systems shall be provided with some means of cleaning by
rodding or flushing.
c) Junction Box
1) A junction box shall be
provided at the intersection of the effluent transport system and distribution
manifold to dissipate the energy of the anticipated hydraulic jump from the
effluent transport system discharge and to proportionally split the flow to the
distribution manifold(s).
2) The
recommended junction box design specifications are provided in Appendix
H.
3) The junction box should be
provided with a removable cover to allow entry for maintenance and prevent
entry of objects that would interfere with the operation of the runoff field
application system.
d) Distribution Manifold
1) Pressurized
distribution manifolds shall be designed by normal engineering considerations
including but not limited to static head, friction losses, flow velocity, and
pipe diameter.
2) Gravity flow
distribution manifolds shall be less than 50 feet long each and at least 2 feet
shorter than the width of the field application area.
3) The following must be considered in the
distribution manifold design:
A) Construction
material
B) Length
C) Capacity
D) Slope (level)
E) Solids removal and cleaning
F) Providing uniform sheet flow
i) Effluent transport system connection
point
ii) Capped ends
iii) Orifice or V-notch weir design and
spacing
iv) Splash apron such as
pea gravel or concrete
G) Location of junction box
4) Recommended designs of
distribution manifolds are provided in Appendix H.
5) Distribution manifolds must be anchored
securely while in operation.
e) Runoff Field Application Area
1) The runoff field application area shall be
located on gently sloping soils of moderate permeability supporting a heavy
stand of grass vegetation and designed to operate by overland flow.
2) Slopes shall be shaped to cause applied
runoff to flow uniformly across the design width for the entire length of the
field application area.
3) The
uniform sheet flow shall move downslope through the field application area flow
length at a velocity that will provide a minimum contact time of two hours.
Appendix E, gives minimum flow lengths needed to provide a contact time of 2
hours at various slopes.
4) Field
application areas shall have a minimum width of 20 feet and a maximum width of
100 feet.
5) The range of soil
infiltration rates specified in the planning considerations (1.0 to 6.0 inches
per hour) insures that the infiltration capacity of the field application area
will equal or exceed the volume of feedlot runoff to be infiltrated for the 1
year - 2 hour design rainstorm event. The following equation shall be used for
designing the field application area (FAA):
FAA |
= |
VR x 12 |
(2 hours x S1) - 1.69 |
when: 1.0 < SI < 6.0 inches per hour
FAA in square feet.
VR in cubic feet.
6) The procedures for determining VR and SI
are provided in Appendix B and C, respectively.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Illinois may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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