In the last years, the scientific literature has reported an increasing use of hydraulic models to describe water distribution systems (WDS). Hydraulic models represent tools for managing the complexity of WDSs, and a number of optimization methods have been proposed to improve the performance of these infrastructures. However, because of the lack of available data on WDSs many works have only considered synthetic WDS with idealized behaviour or small-sized WDSs with simple topology and limited complexity. This lack of complex case studies has often hindered the demonstration of the potential of hydraulic models and of the optimization approaches relying on their use. In this work, we present a case study about a real large WDS. The system is composed of approximately 3000 pipes (>170 km) and 3000 demand nodes (corresponding to 50,000 users) that are spread across a hilly area over a 200 m elevation gradient. Water is provided by ten wells and it is distributed by five pumping stations and four tanks at different elevations. Pump operation is partly automatically controlled by water levels in tanks and partly by a fixed temporal schedule. This complexity results in a nontrivial hydraulic behaviour that is well reproduced by our hydraulic model. The model is also used with a multi-objective genetic algorithm solver to identify different operational scenarios that lead to a reduction of energy consumption and water leakages.

Water Distribution System Modeling and Optimization: A Case Study / Boano, Fulvio; Scibetta, Marco; Ridolfi, Luca; Giustolisi, Orazio. - In: PROCEDIA ENGINEERING. - ISSN 1877-7058. - ELETTRONICO. - 119:(2015), pp. 719-724. [10.1016/j.proeng.2015.08.925]

Water Distribution System Modeling and Optimization: A Case Study

BOANO, Fulvio;RIDOLFI, LUCA;
2015

Abstract

In the last years, the scientific literature has reported an increasing use of hydraulic models to describe water distribution systems (WDS). Hydraulic models represent tools for managing the complexity of WDSs, and a number of optimization methods have been proposed to improve the performance of these infrastructures. However, because of the lack of available data on WDSs many works have only considered synthetic WDS with idealized behaviour or small-sized WDSs with simple topology and limited complexity. This lack of complex case studies has often hindered the demonstration of the potential of hydraulic models and of the optimization approaches relying on their use. In this work, we present a case study about a real large WDS. The system is composed of approximately 3000 pipes (>170 km) and 3000 demand nodes (corresponding to 50,000 users) that are spread across a hilly area over a 200 m elevation gradient. Water is provided by ten wells and it is distributed by five pumping stations and four tanks at different elevations. Pump operation is partly automatically controlled by water levels in tanks and partly by a fixed temporal schedule. This complexity results in a nontrivial hydraulic behaviour that is well reproduced by our hydraulic model. The model is also used with a multi-objective genetic algorithm solver to identify different operational scenarios that lead to a reduction of energy consumption and water leakages.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2646751
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