Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system

Valves play a critical role in a water distribution system for subsystem isolation and flow or pressure control. Among them, subsystem isolation is required to repair or to rehabilitate a broken component and can be done by closing adjacent valves. To evaluate the role of valves, the concept of â S...

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Main Author: Jun, Hwandon
Other Authors: Civil Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27875
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05242005-212555/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-278752020-09-26T05:31:46Z Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system Jun, Hwandon Civil Engineering Loganathan, G. V. Trani, Antonio A. Lohani, Vinod K. Younos, Tamim Kibler, David F. Segment Performance Indicators Failure Analysis Simulation Matrix Algorithm Valve Water Distribution System Valves play a critical role in a water distribution system for subsystem isolation and flow or pressure control. Among them, subsystem isolation is required to repair or to rehabilitate a broken component and can be done by closing adjacent valves. To evaluate the role of valves, the concept of â Segmentâ is necessary. A segment consists of a set of pipes and nodes isolated together by closing adjacent valves when a pipe fails. An efficient algorithm to identify segments in a water distribution system is proposed. In addition, when a segment is isolated, an additional subsystem may be disconnected from water sources by the segment isolation. It is a topological unintended isolation. In addition, a hydraulic failure, in terms of pressure types of failures at demand nodes should be considered. These three account for the failure impact of a pipe. Placing valves efficiently improves the reliability of a water distribution system. However, the valve reliability itself is not 100%. Therefore, valve failure consequence should be explored in determining the locations of valves. For this purpose, three methodologies, namely segment-valve matrix algorithm, decision tree approach and simulation are proposed. Another consideration for placing valves is a strategic valving rule, namely N and (N-1) valving rules. Using a formulation for node reliability in terms of failing valves, the reliability difference between the two valving rules is evaluated. We also employ a mixed N and (N-1) valving rule. Another strategic valving rule, a segment size reducing approach minimizing the number of affected customers is proposed. The developed algorithms are utilized to build software, the Strategic Valve Management Model, to solve practical problems. The methodology is applied to three real water distribution systems. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:12:32Z 2014-03-14T20:12:32Z 2005-05-06 2005-05-24 2008-06-22 2005-06-22 Dissertation etd-05242005-212555 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27875 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05242005-212555/ Diss_HwandonJun.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Segment
Performance Indicators
Failure Analysis
Simulation
Matrix Algorithm
Valve
Water Distribution System
spellingShingle Segment
Performance Indicators
Failure Analysis
Simulation
Matrix Algorithm
Valve
Water Distribution System
Jun, Hwandon
Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system
description Valves play a critical role in a water distribution system for subsystem isolation and flow or pressure control. Among them, subsystem isolation is required to repair or to rehabilitate a broken component and can be done by closing adjacent valves. To evaluate the role of valves, the concept of â Segmentâ is necessary. A segment consists of a set of pipes and nodes isolated together by closing adjacent valves when a pipe fails. An efficient algorithm to identify segments in a water distribution system is proposed. In addition, when a segment is isolated, an additional subsystem may be disconnected from water sources by the segment isolation. It is a topological unintended isolation. In addition, a hydraulic failure, in terms of pressure types of failures at demand nodes should be considered. These three account for the failure impact of a pipe. Placing valves efficiently improves the reliability of a water distribution system. However, the valve reliability itself is not 100%. Therefore, valve failure consequence should be explored in determining the locations of valves. For this purpose, three methodologies, namely segment-valve matrix algorithm, decision tree approach and simulation are proposed. Another consideration for placing valves is a strategic valving rule, namely N and (N-1) valving rules. Using a formulation for node reliability in terms of failing valves, the reliability difference between the two valving rules is evaluated. We also employ a mixed N and (N-1) valving rule. Another strategic valving rule, a segment size reducing approach minimizing the number of affected customers is proposed. The developed algorithms are utilized to build software, the Strategic Valve Management Model, to solve practical problems. The methodology is applied to three real water distribution systems. === Ph. D.
author2 Civil Engineering
author_facet Civil Engineering
Jun, Hwandon
author Jun, Hwandon
author_sort Jun, Hwandon
title Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system
title_short Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system
title_full Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system
title_fullStr Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system
title_full_unstemmed Strategic valve locations in a water distribution system
title_sort strategic valve locations in a water distribution system
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27875
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05242005-212555/
work_keys_str_mv AT junhwandon strategicvalvelocationsinawaterdistributionsystem
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