Advanced Water Distribution Modeling and Management: Authors
Advanced Water Distribution Modeling and Management: Authors
Advanced Water Distribution Modeling and Management: Authors
M E T H O D S
ADVANCED WATER
DISTRIBUTION MODELING
AND MANAGEMENT
F i r s t
E d i t i o n
Authors
Haestad Methods
Thomas M. Walski
Donald V. Chase
Dragan A. Savic
Walter Grayman
Stephen Beckwith
Edmundo Koelle
Managing Editor
Adam Strafaci
Project Editors
Colleen Totz, Kristen Dietrich
Contributing Authors
Scott Cattran, Rick Hammond, Kevin Laptos, Steven G. Lowry,
Robert F. Mankowski, Stan Plante, John Przybyla, Barbara Schmitz
Peer Review Board
Lee Cesario (Denver Water), Robert M. Clark (U.S. EPA),
Jack Dangermond (ESRI), Allen L. Davis (CH2M Hill),
Paul DeBarry (Borton-Lawson), Frank DeFazio (Franklin G. DeFazio Corp.),
Kevin Finnan (Bristol Babcock), Wayne Hartell (Haestad Methods),
Brian Hoefer (ESRI), Bassam Kassab (Santa Clara Valley Water District),
James W. Male (University of Portland), William M. Richards
(WMR Engineering), Zheng Wu (Haestad Methods),
and E. Benjamin Wylie (University of Michigan)
HAESTAD PRESS
Waterbury, CT USA
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Preface
xv
xix
xxi
Introduction to Water
Distribution Modeling
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
10
1.6
What Next?
18
ii
Table of Contents
Chapter 2
Modeling Theory
19
2.1
Fluid Properties
19
Density and Specific Weight ................................... 19
Viscosity .................................................................. 20
Fluid Compressibility .............................................. 22
Vapor Pressure......................................................... 23
2.2
2.3
Energy Concepts
29
Energy Losses.......................................................... 30
2.4
Friction Losses
30
Darcy-Weisbach Formula........................................ 32
Hazen-Williams ....................................................... 34
Manning Equation ................................................... 37
Comparison of Friction Loss Methods .................... 38
2.5
Minor Losses
39
Valve Coefficient..................................................... 40
Equivalent Pipe Length ........................................... 42
2.6
Resistance Coefficients
42
Darcy-Weisbach ...................................................... 42
Hazen-Williams ....................................................... 43
Manning................................................................... 43
Minor Losses ........................................................... 43
2.7
2.8
Network Hydraulics
49
Conservation of Mass .............................................. 49
Conservation of Energy ........................................... 50
Solving Network Problems...................................... 51
2.9
iii
Chapter 3
Assembling a Model
75
3.1
3.2
Model Representation
79
Network Elements ....................................................80
Network Topology ...................................................82
3.3
Reservoirs
84
3.4
Tanks
84
3.5
Junctions
88
Junction Elevation ....................................................89
3.6
Pipes
90
Length.......................................................................91
Diameter ...................................................................91
Minor Losses ............................................................94
3.7
Pumps
95
Pump Characteristic Curves .....................................95
Model Representation ..............................................98
3.8
Valves
100
Isolation Valves......................................................101
Directional Valves..................................................102
Altitude Valves.......................................................103
Air Release Valves and Vacuum
Breaking Valves ...................................................104
Control Valves........................................................104
Valve Books ...........................................................107
3.9
Controls (Switches)
107
Pipe Controls ..........................................................107
Pump Controls........................................................107
Regulating Valve Controls .....................................108
Indicators of Control Settings ................................108
3.10
Types of Simulations
109
Steady-State Simulation .........................................109
Extended-Period Simulation ..................................109
Other Types of Simulations....................................112
iv
Table of Contents
3.11
Skeletonization
112
Skeletonization Example ....................................... 112
Skeletonization Guidelines .................................... 115
Elements of High Importance................................ 116
Elements of Unknown Importance ........................ 116
Automated Skeletonization.................................... 116
Skeletonization Conclusions.................................. 124
3.12
Model Maintenance
Chapter 4
Water Consumption
125
133
4.1
Baseline Demands
134
Data Sources .......................................................... 134
Spatial Allocation of Demands.............................. 136
Using GIS for Demand Allocation ........................ 140
Categorizing Demands .......................................... 144
Mass Balance Technique ....................................... 145
Using Unit Demands ............................................. 147
Unaccounted-For Water ........................................ 151
4.2
Demand Multipliers
152
Peaking Factors...................................................... 153
4.3
Time-Varying Demands
155
Diurnal Curves....................................................... 155
Developing System-Wide Diurnal Curves ............ 156
Developing Customer Diurnal Curves .................. 157
Defining Usage Patterns within a Model............... 159
4.4
4.5
165
Chapter 5
181
5.1
Testing Fundamentals
181
Pressure Measurement............................................181
Flow Measurement.................................................182
Potential Pitfalls in System Measurements ............184
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
5.6
5.7
5.8
218
vi
Table of Contents
Chapter 6
235
6.1
236
6.2
236
6.3
238
6.4
239
6.5
6.6
247
6.7
248
Chapter 7
Calibrating Hydraulic
Network Models
251
7.1
7.2
7.3
Calibration Approaches
263
Manual Calibration Approaches ............................ 264
Automated Calibration Approaches ...................... 268
Model Validation ................................................... 278
vii
7.4
7.5
7.6
Chapter 8
287
297
8.1
8.2
8.3
Pumped Systems
310
Pumping into a Closed System with
No Pressure Control Valve...................................312
Pumping into a Closed System with
Pressure Control ...................................................313
Variable-Speed Pumps ...........................................313
Pumping into a System with a Storage Tank .........316
Pumping into Closed System with
Pumped Storage....................................................316
Pumping into Hydropneumatic Tanks....................318
Well Pumping.........................................................319
Pumps in Parallel....................................................322
Head Loss on Suction Side of Pump......................324
viii
Table of Contents
8.4
8.5
8.6
342
8.7
8.8
8.9
354
8.10
8.11
ix
Chapter 9
393
9.1
394
9.2
Backflow Preventers
397
9.3
398
9.4
Customer Demands
399
Commercial Demands for Proposed Systems ........399
9.5
Sprinkler Design
401
Starting Point for Model.........................................401
Sprinkler Hydraulics ..............................................402
Approximating Sprinkler Hydraulics .....................403
Piping Design .........................................................404
Fire Sprinklers ........................................................406
Sprinkler Pipe Sizing..............................................408
Irrigation Sprinklers ...............................................408
Chapter 10
Operations
417
10.1
417
10.2
10.3
10.4
10.5
427
Table of Contents
10.6
10.7
Power Outages
435
Modeling Power Outages ...................................... 435
Duration of an Outage ........................................... 436
10.8
Power Consumption
436
Determining Pump Operating Points..................... 438
Calculating Energy Costs ...................................... 439
Multiple Distinct Operating Points........................ 440
Continuously Varying Pump Flow ........................ 441
Developing a Curve Relating
Flow to Efficiency ............................................... 442
Variable-Speed Pumps .......................................... 443
Using Pump Energy Data ...................................... 444
Understanding Rate Structures .............................. 445
Optimal Pump Scheduling..................................... 446
10.9
10.10
10.11
459
10.12
Leakage Control
460
10.13
Maintaining an Adequate
Disinfectant Residual
462
Disinfectant Residual Assessment......................... 463
Booster Chlorination.............................................. 465
DBP Formation...................................................... 467
Optimization Techniques....................................... 467
xi
Chapter 11
499
11.1
11.2
11.3
Assessment of Vulnerability
508
Inspections and Checklists .....................................510
Formal Assessment Tools and Methods.................510
11.4
11.5
Security Measures
Chapter 12
499
519
527
12.1
GIS Fundamentals
528
Data Management ..................................................530
Geographic Data Models........................................532
12.2
12.3
Model Construction
542
Model Sustainability and Maintenance ..................544
Communication Between GIS and
Modeling Staff......................................................544
Using an Existing GIS for Modeling......................546
Network Components.............................................546
Retrieval of Water Use Data ..................................549
Retrieval of Elevation Data ....................................555
Modeling GIS Versus Enterprise GIS....................557
xii
Table of Contents
12.4
12.5
567
Chapter 13
573
13.1
13.2
13.3
13.4
600
13.5
602
13.6
Transient Control
602
Piping System Design and Layout......................... 603
Protection Devices ................................................. 607
13.7
Operational Considerations
615
Flow Control Stations ............................................ 616
Air Release Valves ................................................ 619
xiii
Appendix A
625
Appendix B
Conversion Factors
633
Appendix C
Tables
637
Appendix D
643
Appendix E
SCADA Basics
685
Bibliography
703
Index
729