March-April 2010

Products of Their Environment

The choice of RECPs depends on runoff flow rates, revegetation needs, and eco-friendliness.

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Photo: American Excelsior
American Excelsior’s biodegradable Curlex NetFree rolled erosion control product

By Don Talend

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E-Staples from American Excelsior are a new biodegradable anchoring staple system. They can be used with the Curlex NetFree system for a completely biodegradable project. The staples biodegrade with exposure to bacteria in accordance with ASTM 5338 and ASTM 5271 and have barbed shoulders and heads for holding capability.

SedimentStop is a biodegradable sediment filtration system from North American Green that consists of straw and coir fiber reinforced with a completely biodegradable netting that is rolled from edge to edge to create a temporary, water-permeable sediment filtration structure. The system is designed to reduce soil loss caused by stormwater runoff as it traps soil particles while allowing water to pass through. Net-reinforced layers prevent failures if the outer netting wrap is damaged after installation. The system is configured for flexibility and conformity to the ground surface to minimize undercutting. A Splash Apron attachment is designed to improve sediment filtration while reducing potential downhill erosion.

North American Green also has several fasteners for blankets and mats. The company’s rigid, biodegradable BioStakes, available in 4- and 6-inch lengths, are an alternative to metal staples. The company also provides wooden EcoStakes in 6-, 12-, 18-, and 24-inch lengths.

BioD-Roll coir rolls from RoLanka are made from coir fiber densely packed into a tubular 2-inch-by-2-inch outer netting and provide initial structural stability for shorelines and streambanks by resisting wave action and flow velocity. The coconut-fiber core is engineered to provide an environment for plant growth. Over time, sediment is deposited around the coir rolls, providing an environment for riparian vegetation. The company says that the product lasts for more than five years. It is available in 12-, 16-, and 20-inch diameters and in densities of 9 or 7 pounds per cubic foot. The manufacturer also offers BioD-Block, a fabric-attached coir fiber block system for slope stabilization, streambank, and shoreline restoration and stream relocations. It utilizes a densely packed, elongated mattress, coir fiber block attached to a bristle coir woven fabric. Coir fabric is tightly wrapped around two block sizes: 12 inches tall and 5 inches thick, or 16 inches tall and 9 inches thick. The fabric is connected to the coir block on three sides, leaving one side open to fill with dirt.

Maintenance Concerns
The potential for maintenance to disrupt the effectiveness of RECPs is a concern in regard to these products.

Mark Deitering, partner with Enviroscape ECM Ltd., says that if a blanket is stapled properly, the potential for vegetation lifting the blanket is minimal. RECP-reinforced grass can be mowed as if the area was seeded and covered with straw. Maintenance issues usually arise with the thread and not the netting, he concludes. Kelsey says that the proper use—in terms of patterns and quantities—of anchoring devices such as turf staples allows vegetation to grow up through the ECB while contact with the subgrade is maintained. Areas that require early mowing typically utilize netless ECBs or ECBs with rapid-degrade netting, Kelsey adds. Biodegradable staples are typically safer than conventional steel wire staples, because if they are struck by a mower, they will simply break apart rather than potentially being projected from underneath the mower.

Pack points out that since RECPs are installed at the ground surface, mowers generally do not come into contact with them. Fasteners such as staples and stakes used to install RECPs should be selected based on soil conditions, matting, and required performance, as well as on planned site use. Fasteners that install flush to the ground level should have no adverse safety issues, Pack adds.

“The main thing is to ensure proper installation in accordance with the manufacturer’s recommendations and ensure that the installers utilize the appropriate material that’s been specified in the plans,” says Seawell. “There are so many different variables with blankets, but as far as allowing erosion under the blankets, that will occur without your seedbed prep, implementing tracking on slopes by running the bulldozer up the slopes, and just making sure that they’re installed properly.”

Knowledge-Enhancing Resources
Contractors and engineers can enhance their knowledge of RECPs by using several sources, including the Erosion Control Technology Council (ECTC) Quality Data Oversight and Review (QDOR) program, www.qdor.org, and ErosionLab, www.erosionlab.com, a large-scale erosion and sediment control research and testing laboratory in Rice Lake, WI.

The QDOR Guidance Manual provides requirements for RECPs based upon standards such as AASHTO-NTPEP, ASTM D 6459, and ASTM D6460. The program is designed to assist government agencies, engineers, specifiers and inspectors who use rolled erosion control products effectively in their erosion control and stormwater projects. Products bearing the QDOR seal have been manufactured and tested according to industry standards, similarly to the Underwriters Laboratory (UL) label. The guidance manual describes the program.

All products submitted into the QDOR program must have data verified by the laboratory conducting the testing and the data are compiled with an online data-collection system. Approved products are allowed to use the official QDOR logo on the products and product- specific literature and packaging materials. Requirements will be upgraded and changed as RECP technology and the erosion control industry evolve.

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The stated goal of ErosionLab is advancement of the industry and, to that end, it hosts several educational tours each year, notes Kelsey. Other activities include testing of erosion and sediment control products; research and development processes; and the development of technical papers, presentations, and test reports.

The lab has three primary facilities: the Rainfall Erosion Facility, the Channel Erosion Research Facility, and the Sediment Control Facility. Numerous research projects have been undertaken as well, including a study of the movement of available nitrogen in soils covered with erosion control products and soils that are unprotected, and a vegetation study that yielded vegetation density, total biomass production, and soil moisture enhancement ability for ECBs.


Author's Bio: Don Talend of Write Results, West Dundee, IL, specializes in construction trade media.

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