Abstract

AbstractLeakages in water distribution systems (WDSs) are a worldwide problem, which can result in an intolerable burden in satisfying the water demands of the consumers. There is an urgent demand to develop technologies that can detect and localize the leakage in a timely and efficient manner. The monitoring data of the WDS is a typical time series, and there is a certain spatiotemporal correlation between the data provided by the devices distributed at different locations of the WDS. This paper proposes a novel model-based method for WDS leakage localization. The method is characterized by (1) developing the dominant sensor sequence for each candidate leakage node to improve the localization accuracy based on the spatial correlation analysis; (2) utilizing multiple time steps of the measurements which are temporal varying correlated; (3) ranking leakage regions and nodes by their possibility to contain the true leakage. A realistic WDS is used to evaluate the performance of the method. Results show that the method can accurately and efficiently localize the leakage.

Highlights

  • The water distribution system (WDS) is one of the most important infrastructures that deliver drinking water to various consumers

  • Using the dominant sensor sequences can improve localization accuracy by about 50% compared with the method that does not use the dominant sensor sequence

  • This paper presents a novel model-based method for leakage localization in WDSs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The water distribution system (WDS) is one of the most important infrastructures that deliver drinking water to various consumers. The safety and reliability of water distribution systems (WDSs) are crucial for cities (Duan et al 2020). Leakages in WDS can damage the infrastructure, leading to an intolerable burden in a world struggling with satisfying the water demands of a growing population. Water losses caused by pipe leakages account for 30% of the total amount of drinking water in the WDSs (Puust et al 2010). The water losses, as well as the cost of repairing the failed pipes, can result in significant economic costs. Locating and repairing leakages in a timely manner is extremely urgent to the water utility for economic, environmental, and reputational reasons

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call