The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW software

Common reasons of real water loss in distribution systems are leakages caused by the failures or pipe breakages. Depending on the intensity of leakage from a damaged buried pipe, water can flow to the soil surface just after the failure occurs, much later or never at all. The localization of the pla...

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Main Authors: Iwanek Małgorzata, Suchorab Paweł
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:ITM Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/itmconf/20171503006
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spelling doaj-8f533f895b564d5fa94566fa638520112021-02-02T02:41:07ZengEDP SciencesITM Web of Conferences2271-20972017-01-01150300610.1051/itmconf/20171503006itmconf_cmes-17_03006The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW softwareIwanek MałgorzataSuchorab PawełCommon reasons of real water loss in distribution systems are leakages caused by the failures or pipe breakages. Depending on the intensity of leakage from a damaged buried pipe, water can flow to the soil surface just after the failure occurs, much later or never at all. The localization of the place where the pipe breakage occurs is relatively easy when water outflow occurs on the soil surface. The volume of lost water strongly depends on the time it takes to localize the place of a pipe breakage. The aim of this paper was to predict the volume of water lost between the moment of a failure occurring and the moment of water outflow on the soil surface, during a prospective failure in a distribution system. The basis of the analysis was a numerical simulation of a water pipe failure using the FEFLOW v. 5.3 software (Finite Element subsurface FLOW systems) for a real middle-sized distribution system. Simulations were conducted for variants depending on pipes’ diameter (80÷200 mm) for minimal and maximal hydraulic pressure head in the system (20.14 and 60.41 m H2O, respectively). FEFLOW software application enabled to select places in the water system where possible failures would be difficult to detect.https://doi.org/10.1051/itmconf/20171503006
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iwanek Małgorzata
Suchorab Paweł
spellingShingle Iwanek Małgorzata
Suchorab Paweł
The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW software
ITM Web of Conferences
author_facet Iwanek Małgorzata
Suchorab Paweł
author_sort Iwanek Małgorzata
title The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW software
title_short The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW software
title_full The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW software
title_fullStr The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW software
title_full_unstemmed The assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the FEFLOW software
title_sort assessment of water loss from a damaged distribution pipe using the feflow software
publisher EDP Sciences
series ITM Web of Conferences
issn 2271-2097
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Common reasons of real water loss in distribution systems are leakages caused by the failures or pipe breakages. Depending on the intensity of leakage from a damaged buried pipe, water can flow to the soil surface just after the failure occurs, much later or never at all. The localization of the place where the pipe breakage occurs is relatively easy when water outflow occurs on the soil surface. The volume of lost water strongly depends on the time it takes to localize the place of a pipe breakage. The aim of this paper was to predict the volume of water lost between the moment of a failure occurring and the moment of water outflow on the soil surface, during a prospective failure in a distribution system. The basis of the analysis was a numerical simulation of a water pipe failure using the FEFLOW v. 5.3 software (Finite Element subsurface FLOW systems) for a real middle-sized distribution system. Simulations were conducted for variants depending on pipes’ diameter (80÷200 mm) for minimal and maximal hydraulic pressure head in the system (20.14 and 60.41 m H2O, respectively). FEFLOW software application enabled to select places in the water system where possible failures would be difficult to detect.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/itmconf/20171503006
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