6533b86efe1ef96bd12cb2a8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Impact of diffusion and dispersion of contaminants in water distribution networks modelling and monitoring

Mariacrocetta SambitoValeria PuleoStefania PiazzaGabriele FreniE. J. Mirjam Blokker

subject

Distribution networksChemical physics0208 environmental biotechnologyDispersion (optics)Environmental science02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesDiffusion (business)Contamination01 natural sciences020801 environmental engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and Technology

description

Abstract In recent years, there has been a need to seek adequate preventive measures to deal with contamination in water distribution networks that may be related to the accidental contamination and the deliberate injection of toxic agents. Therefore, it is very important to create a sensor system that detects contamination events in real time, maintains the reliability and efficiency of measurements, and limits the cost of the instrumentation. To this aim, two problems have to be faced: practical difficulties connected to the experimental verification of the optimal sensor configuration efficiency on real operating systems and challenges related to the reliability of the network modelling approaches, which usually neglect the dispersion and diffusion phenomena. The present study applies a numerical optimization approach using the NSGA-II genetic algorithm that was coupled with a new diffusive-dispersive hydraulic simulator. The results are compared with those of an experimental campaign on a laboratory network (Enna, Italy) equipped with a real-time water quality monitoring system and those of a full-scale real distribution network (Zandvoort, Netherlands). The results showed the importance of diffusive processes when flow velocity in the network is low. Neglecting diffusion can negatively influence the water quality sensor positioning, leading to inefficient monitoring networks.

https://doi.org/10.2166/ws.2019.131