Abstract

Illegal discharges of pollutants into sewage networks are a growing problem in large European cities. Such events often require restarting wastewater treatment plants, which cost up to a hundred thousand Euros. A system for localization and quantification of pollutants in utility networks could discourage such behavior and indicate a culprit if it happens. We propose an enhanced algorithm for multisensor data fusion for the detection, localization, and quantification of pollutants in wastewater networks. The algorithm processes data from multiple heterogeneous sensors in real-time, producing current estimates of network state and alarms if one or many sensors detect pollutants. Our algorithm models the network as a directed acyclic graph, uses adaptive peak detection, estimates the amount of specific compounds, and tracks the pollutant using a Kalman filter. We performed numerical experiments for several real and artificial sewage networks, and measured the quality of discharge event reconstruction. We report the correctness and performance of our system. We also propose a method to assess the importance of specific sensor locations. The experiments show that the algorithm’s success rate is equal to sensor coverage of the network. Moreover, the median distance between nodes pointed out by the fusion algorithm and nodes where the discharge was introduced equals zero when more than half of the network nodes contain sensors. The system can process around 5000 measurements per second, using 1 MiB of memory per 4600 measurements plus a constant of 97 MiB, and it can process 20 tracks per second, using 1.3 MiB of memory per 100 tracks.

Highlights

  • Due to industrialization, society must take care of waste disposal and the efficient operation of sewage treatment plants

  • Sensor technology constantly improves and, due to developments in the Internet of Things (IoT) space, provided measurements are easier to access for processing than ever

  • We propose an enhanced data fusion algorithm for the detection, localization, and quantification of pollutants in wastewater networks (WWNs)

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Summary

Introduction

Society must take care of waste disposal and the efficient operation of sewage treatment plants. Breakdowns in these areas are a growing threat, so it is crucial to continuously monitor utility networks and react as soon as possible. Researchers’ interest in exploring methods for the detection, localization, and quantification of pollutants in wastewater networks (WWNs) and water distribution systems (WDSs) has grown considerably in recent years, especially regarding sensor technology [1–16]. Questionable policies regarding waste disposal are prevalent in today’s industry [17,18]. This is why we see more and more incidents connected to WWNs [13,19–21]

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