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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Examining the Relationship between Pumping Energy and Geographically-Targeted Water Conservation Measures in Municipal Water Distribution Networks

Oldford, Alexandra 04 June 2013 (has links)
Municipal water distribution systems are operated and maintained by utilities whose first priority is the safe and reliable provision of drinking water to consumers. The cost to move and treat water through distribution networks is significant and can account for up to 80% of a utility’s energy costs. As these networks age, operating and maintenance costs continue to increase due to higher incidences of leaks and breaks and increased pipe friction leading to higher energy use. Many utilities are considering water conservation as a strategy to reducing their energy consumption by reducing the amount of water being pumped and treated in their jurisdictions. This work studies the pumping energy response of a distribution system when water conservation strategies are implemented in small geographic areas in the network. A water conservation plan is tailored to each defined area by specifying which conservation measures are feasible to implement, desired by the customer, and are attractive to the utility based on a potential return on investment in the form of reduced electricity bills to pump and treat water. Energy intensity and energy elasticity indicators are developed to assess the mechanical energy used in a network to distribute water to end-users. A case study for the City of Kingston water distribution system is presented. The distribution system studied indicated that when water conservation strategies produced marginal water savings, the energy response was inelastic to changes in water demand. The amount of energy required to move one cubic metre of water through the network increased with higher water savings because the percent savings of water was higher than the percent savings of pumping energy. / Thesis (Master, Civil Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2013-05-31 14:20:18.363
2

Evaluation of water distribution system monitoring using a combined simulation-optimization approach

Graybeal, Dale Kevin 31 January 2009 (has links)
A simulation-optimization methodology was used to assess monitoring strategies for a drinking water distribution network. Multiple simulation trials of contamination events were used to create input data for an integer optimization problem. A network model, based on the Blacksburg, VA water distribution system, was used as the basis for a case study of contaminant transport under conditions of uncertainty. The model was not calibrated due to the lack of reliable field data. Optimization of monitoring plans was performed within the context event based simulation trials. This precluded the design of monitoring plans that were directly compatible with requirements of water quality regulations. However, the results of the optimization did provide information that may be of use to the broader problem of compliance monitoring. Optimal plans were assessed in comparison with several alternative plans using a separate set of simulation trials. Optimization of monitoring plans derived from simulated source node contamination events was generally effective at choosing points that provided better detection of source node contamination than alternative plans based on random sampling or judgement sampling. Optimal monitoring plans derived from simulated random node contamination events were ineffective at detecting random node contamination. The results of optimization and the separate analysis of monitoring plan performance indicated that the number of simulation trials may have been inadequate to completely describe the stochastic behavior of the system. Additionally, comparison of these results with those obtained from a previous simulation study indicate that the results of any simulation of distribution system contamination may be very sensitive to the level of contaminant loading and the size and layout of the system. / Master of Science
3

Effects of load shifting on water quality in a large potable water network / Francois Gysbert Jansen van Rensburg

Jansen van Rensburg, Francois Gysbert January 2015 (has links)
Mathematical analyses indicated that significant possibilities exist for load shifting projects on a Large Potable Water Utility (LPWU) in South Africa. A primary concern remained, i.e. whether the load variation would have an effect on the water quality. Extensive simulation and testing were initiated in order to prove that the load shift will not affect the water quality. In South Africa, the highest standard for drinking water is the Blue Drop award. The LPWU has received this award multiple times and strives to maintain it. An investigation was launched to determine if this load shifting project would have an effect on the quality standards to which the utility holds (SANS 241 (2011)). The LPWU has over 3000 km of pipelines to supply potable water to the industrial heartland of the country as well as millions of domestic users. The LPWU network is the longest pumping network in the world and is still expanding. The investigation included a simulation of a pumping simulation package to determine how the system would react to the changes. In this simulation, the load reduction in terms of Mega litre per day (Ml/day) was established. Results were compared to the normal operating parameters of the Water Treatment Works (WTW). The mathematical analysis in this investigation concluded that an evening peak load shift of 24.5 MW is achievable. This dissertation will emphasise the necessity of a detailed investigation. The investigations and simulation will determine that the volume of water is well within the operating parameters of the WTW. Studies were done on each area of the plant. In-depth conversations with WTW personnel revealed that the reduction of the volume of water in question will not have an effect on the water quality. Further, it was established that it would be possible to use the sumps of the water treatment works to achieve the desired load shift. By using the sumps of the WTW, a load shift can be done without stopping any process in the WTW with the exception of disinfection at the Booster Pump Stations (BPS), where the balancing reservoirs were used as buffer capacity. The investigation shifted to establish whether stagnant water and a change in dosage would have an effect on the water quality in regard to the reduction and recovery load. As expected, the water never became stagnant at any moment due to the fact that only a small portion of the load was reduced. The water quality and dosage report of the water utility was used and compared to normal operations. The planned load shift had no effect on any aspects of the water quality. The project is feasible and will reach the set targets without affecting the water quality. / MIng (Mechanical Engineering), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
4

Effects of load shifting on water quality in a large potable water network / Francois Gysbert Jansen van Rensburg

Jansen van Rensburg, Francois Gysbert January 2015 (has links)
Mathematical analyses indicated that significant possibilities exist for load shifting projects on a Large Potable Water Utility (LPWU) in South Africa. A primary concern remained, i.e. whether the load variation would have an effect on the water quality. Extensive simulation and testing were initiated in order to prove that the load shift will not affect the water quality. In South Africa, the highest standard for drinking water is the Blue Drop award. The LPWU has received this award multiple times and strives to maintain it. An investigation was launched to determine if this load shifting project would have an effect on the quality standards to which the utility holds (SANS 241 (2011)). The LPWU has over 3000 km of pipelines to supply potable water to the industrial heartland of the country as well as millions of domestic users. The LPWU network is the longest pumping network in the world and is still expanding. The investigation included a simulation of a pumping simulation package to determine how the system would react to the changes. In this simulation, the load reduction in terms of Mega litre per day (Ml/day) was established. Results were compared to the normal operating parameters of the Water Treatment Works (WTW). The mathematical analysis in this investigation concluded that an evening peak load shift of 24.5 MW is achievable. This dissertation will emphasise the necessity of a detailed investigation. The investigations and simulation will determine that the volume of water is well within the operating parameters of the WTW. Studies were done on each area of the plant. In-depth conversations with WTW personnel revealed that the reduction of the volume of water in question will not have an effect on the water quality. Further, it was established that it would be possible to use the sumps of the water treatment works to achieve the desired load shift. By using the sumps of the WTW, a load shift can be done without stopping any process in the WTW with the exception of disinfection at the Booster Pump Stations (BPS), where the balancing reservoirs were used as buffer capacity. The investigation shifted to establish whether stagnant water and a change in dosage would have an effect on the water quality in regard to the reduction and recovery load. As expected, the water never became stagnant at any moment due to the fact that only a small portion of the load was reduced. The water quality and dosage report of the water utility was used and compared to normal operations. The planned load shift had no effect on any aspects of the water quality. The project is feasible and will reach the set targets without affecting the water quality. / MIng (Mechanical Engineering), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
5

Multi-objective hyper-heuristics and their application to water distribution network design

McClymont, Kent January 2012 (has links)
Hyper-heuristics is a new field of optimisation which has recently emerged and is receiving growing exposure in the research community and literature. Hyper-heuristics are optimisation methods which are designed with a high level of abstraction from any one specific problem or class of problems and therefore are more generally applicable than specialised meta-heuristic and heuristic methods. Instead of being designed to solve a specific real-world problem, hyper-heuristics are designed to solve the problem of heuristic generation and selection. As such, hyper-heuristics can be thought of as methods for optimising the operations of an optimisation process which finds good solutions to a problem as a by-product. This approach has been shown to be very effective and in some cases provides improvement in search performance as well as reducing the burden associated with tailoring meta-heuristics which is often required when solving new problems. In this thesis, the hypothesis that hyper-heuristics can be competitively applied to real-world multi-objective optimisation problems such as the water distribution design problem is tested. Although many single-objective hyper-heuristics have been proposed in the literature, only a few multi-objective methods have been proposed. This thesis explores two different novel multi-objective hyper-heuristics: one designed for generating new specialised heuristics; and one designed for solving the online selection of heuristics. Firstly, the behaviour of a set of heuristics is explored to create a base understanding of different heuristic behavioural traits in order to better understand the hyper-heuristic behaviours and dynamics later in the study. Both approaches are tested on a range of benchmark optimisation problems and finally applied to real-world instances of the water distribution network design problem where the selective hyper-heuristics is demonstrated as being very effective at solving this difficult problem. Furthermore, the thesis demonstrates how heuristic selection can be improved by incorporating a greater level of information about heuristic performance, namely the historical joint performance of different heuristics, and shows that exploiting this sequencing information in heuristic selection can produce highly competitive results.
6

Aplicação de métricas de confiabilidade para avaliação da setorização de sistemas de abastecimento de água / Usage of reliability measures for water network partitioning assessment

Tatiana Mateus Gomes 08 October 2018 (has links)
Os avanços observados em Sistemas de Distribuição de Água vêm surgindo da necessidade de aumentar a eficiência, a qualidade e segurança do abastecimento de água aos consumidores. Dois desses avanços recentes que podem ser citados são a setorização e a quantificação da confiabilidade. O processo de setorização de um sistema de distribuição de água favorece a sua gestão, uma vez que possibilita maior controle da vazão distribuída e dos limites de fornecimento do serviço, entretanto pode implicar em restrições no abastecimento durante eventos de falhas ou emergências, sendo necessária a avaliação da confiabilidade. Diversos pesquisadores têm buscado uma metodologia coerente e adequada para quantificar a confiabilidade em sistemas de distribuição de água, muitos deles desenvolvendo métricas alternativas que visam simplificar esta definição. O presente trabalho visou investigar métricas alternativas de confiabilidade, propostas na literatura especializada, aplicando-as a estudos de caso para a rede original e após a setorização. Os resultados sugerem a viabilidade de utilização das métricas de confiabilidade como forma de avaliar diferentes níveis de setorização, no que diz respeito à vulnerabilidade do sistema. / Improvements upon Water Distribution Systems have been made under the urge of increasing efficiency, quality and security of water supply to its customers. A couple of recent breakthroughs on Water Distribution Network are partitioning and reliability. Water network partitioning enhances operational management, once it enables higher control of supplied flow and awareness of boundaries regarding each partition. Nevertheless, it can lead to supply restrictions under emergency and failure events, what may require reliability assessment. Several researchers have pursued consistent approach to quantify reliability of Water Distribution Network, many of them proposed surrogate measures which focused on simplifying its measurement. The aim of this work is to look into surrogate reliability measures proposed in the literature and applying them on case studies for its original layout and after proposed partitioning. The results implies the usage feasibility for the reliability measures as a way of evaluating different stages of partitioning, regarding system\'s vulnerability.
7

Calibração de modelos hidráulicos de redes de abastecimento de água de sistemas reais admitindo vazamentos / Calibration analysis considering leakage applied to existing water supply systems

Colombo, Fernando 09 February 2007 (has links)
Considerando a necessidade do controle mais efetivo dos sistemas de distribuição de água para abastecimento, a calibração constitui etapa fundamental a ser trilhada para garantir a reprodução do comportamento dos sistemas sob as mais diversas condições operacionais. Apesar da importância da calibração e da diversidade de modelos construídos com esse propósito no ambiente acadêmico, essa prática não tem sido amplamente utilizada pelas companhias, que demonstram certa relutância em fazer uso de modelos matemáticos. É interessante, portanto, que os modelos existentes sejam intensivamente testados em sistemas reais para que se possam estabelecer diretrizes para a sua utilização, bem como uma maior confiança no seu emprego. O presente trabalho de pesquisa visou o estudo de aplicação de um modelo especialmente construído para a calibração de sistemas, através do qual é possível identificar variáveis de campo tais como rugosidades, diâmetros, parâmetros do modelo de vazamentos, etc. O modelo empregado é abrangente o suficiente para incorporar vazamentos e demandas variáveis com a pressão. Através dele, foram realizados dois estudos de caso e discutidas as razões pelas quais discrepâncias entre os valores simulados e observados foram detectadas, apesar da consistência das respostas produzidas via simulação. Algumas recomendações são feitas também no sentido de viabilizar estudos dessa natureza que possam produzir ferramental diretamente utilizável pelas concessionárias de água para abastecimento. / Considering the need for more effective control of water supply distribution systems, the calibration constitutes fundamental step to guarantee that the system behavior under several operational conditions can be reproduced. Instead of the importance of calibration and the variety of models built by the academy for this purpose, this practice has not been broadly used by the water industry, which demonstrates certain reluctance regards the use of mathematical models. It is interesting, hence, that existing models are intensively tested in real systems to establish guidelines and consequent confidence in their use. The present research focused on the study of a model especially built for the calibration of water supply systems, through which it is possible identify field variables such as roughness, diameters, parameters of leakage model, etc. The model is comprehensive enough to incorporate leakage and pressure driven demands. Two study cases were analyzed supported by the model and discussed the reasons by which disagreement between simulated and observed data were verified, instead of the consistency of results produced by simulation. Some recommendations are made to become practical this kind of study as useful tool for the water industry.
8

Calibração de modelos hidráulicos de redes de abastecimento de água de sistemas reais admitindo vazamentos / Calibration analysis considering leakage applied to existing water supply systems

Fernando Colombo 09 February 2007 (has links)
Considerando a necessidade do controle mais efetivo dos sistemas de distribuição de água para abastecimento, a calibração constitui etapa fundamental a ser trilhada para garantir a reprodução do comportamento dos sistemas sob as mais diversas condições operacionais. Apesar da importância da calibração e da diversidade de modelos construídos com esse propósito no ambiente acadêmico, essa prática não tem sido amplamente utilizada pelas companhias, que demonstram certa relutância em fazer uso de modelos matemáticos. É interessante, portanto, que os modelos existentes sejam intensivamente testados em sistemas reais para que se possam estabelecer diretrizes para a sua utilização, bem como uma maior confiança no seu emprego. O presente trabalho de pesquisa visou o estudo de aplicação de um modelo especialmente construído para a calibração de sistemas, através do qual é possível identificar variáveis de campo tais como rugosidades, diâmetros, parâmetros do modelo de vazamentos, etc. O modelo empregado é abrangente o suficiente para incorporar vazamentos e demandas variáveis com a pressão. Através dele, foram realizados dois estudos de caso e discutidas as razões pelas quais discrepâncias entre os valores simulados e observados foram detectadas, apesar da consistência das respostas produzidas via simulação. Algumas recomendações são feitas também no sentido de viabilizar estudos dessa natureza que possam produzir ferramental diretamente utilizável pelas concessionárias de água para abastecimento. / Considering the need for more effective control of water supply distribution systems, the calibration constitutes fundamental step to guarantee that the system behavior under several operational conditions can be reproduced. Instead of the importance of calibration and the variety of models built by the academy for this purpose, this practice has not been broadly used by the water industry, which demonstrates certain reluctance regards the use of mathematical models. It is interesting, hence, that existing models are intensively tested in real systems to establish guidelines and consequent confidence in their use. The present research focused on the study of a model especially built for the calibration of water supply systems, through which it is possible identify field variables such as roughness, diameters, parameters of leakage model, etc. The model is comprehensive enough to incorporate leakage and pressure driven demands. Two study cases were analyzed supported by the model and discussed the reasons by which disagreement between simulated and observed data were verified, instead of the consistency of results produced by simulation. Some recommendations are made to become practical this kind of study as useful tool for the water industry.
9

Aplicação de métricas de confiabilidade para avaliação da setorização de sistemas de abastecimento de água / Usage of reliability measures for water network partitioning assessment

Gomes, Tatiana Mateus 08 October 2018 (has links)
Os avanços observados em Sistemas de Distribuição de Água vêm surgindo da necessidade de aumentar a eficiência, a qualidade e segurança do abastecimento de água aos consumidores. Dois desses avanços recentes que podem ser citados são a setorização e a quantificação da confiabilidade. O processo de setorização de um sistema de distribuição de água favorece a sua gestão, uma vez que possibilita maior controle da vazão distribuída e dos limites de fornecimento do serviço, entretanto pode implicar em restrições no abastecimento durante eventos de falhas ou emergências, sendo necessária a avaliação da confiabilidade. Diversos pesquisadores têm buscado uma metodologia coerente e adequada para quantificar a confiabilidade em sistemas de distribuição de água, muitos deles desenvolvendo métricas alternativas que visam simplificar esta definição. O presente trabalho visou investigar métricas alternativas de confiabilidade, propostas na literatura especializada, aplicando-as a estudos de caso para a rede original e após a setorização. Os resultados sugerem a viabilidade de utilização das métricas de confiabilidade como forma de avaliar diferentes níveis de setorização, no que diz respeito à vulnerabilidade do sistema. / Improvements upon Water Distribution Systems have been made under the urge of increasing efficiency, quality and security of water supply to its customers. A couple of recent breakthroughs on Water Distribution Network are partitioning and reliability. Water network partitioning enhances operational management, once it enables higher control of supplied flow and awareness of boundaries regarding each partition. Nevertheless, it can lead to supply restrictions under emergency and failure events, what may require reliability assessment. Several researchers have pursued consistent approach to quantify reliability of Water Distribution Network, many of them proposed surrogate measures which focused on simplifying its measurement. The aim of this work is to look into surrogate reliability measures proposed in the literature and applying them on case studies for its original layout and after proposed partitioning. The results implies the usage feasibility for the reliability measures as a way of evaluating different stages of partitioning, regarding system\'s vulnerability.
10

Developing A Methodology For The Design Of Water Distribution Networks Using Genetic Algorithm

Gencoglu, Gencer 01 February 2007 (has links) (PDF)
The realization of planning, design, construction, operation and maintenance of water supply systems pictures one of the largest infrastructure projects of municipalities / water distribution networks should be designed very meticulously. Genetic algorithm is an optimization method that is based on natural evolution and is used for the optimization of water distribution networks. Genetic algorithm is comprised of operators and the operators affect the performance of the algorithm. Although these operators are related with parameters, not much attention has been given for the determination of these parameters for this specific field of water distribution networks. This study represents a novel methodology, which investigates the parameters of the algorithm for different networks. The developed computer program is applied to three networks. Two of these networks are well known examples from the literature / the third network is a pressure zone of Ankara water distribution network. It is found out that, the parameters of the algorithm are related with the network, the case to be optimized and the developed computer program. The pressure penalty constant value varied depending on the pipe costs and the network characteristics. The mutation rate is found to vary in a range of [0.0075 &ndash / 0.0675] for three networks. Elitism rate is determined as the minimum value for the corresponding population size. Crossover probability is found to vary in a range of [0.5 &ndash / 0.9]. The methodology should be applied to determine the appropriate parameter set of genetic algorithm for each optimization study. Using the method described, fairly well results are obtained.

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