Abstract
The scarcity of water resources is the driving force behind modernizing irrigation systems in order to guarantee equal rights to all beneficiaries and to save water. Traditional distribution systems have the common shortcoming that water must be distributed through some rotational criteria. This type of distribution is necessary to spread the benefits of scarce resources. Irrigation systems based on on-demand delivery scheduling offer flexibility to farmers and greater potential profit than other types of irrigation schedules. However, in this type of irrigation system, the network design has to be adequate for delivering the demand during the peak period whilst satisfying minimum pressure constraints along with minimum and maximum velocity constraints at the farm delivery points (hydrants) and in the pipes, respectively. In this paper, optimum design and management of pressurized irrigation systems are considered to be based on rotation and on-demand delivery scheduling using a genetic algorithm. Comparison is made between the two scheduling techniques by application to two real irrigation systems. Performance criteria are formulated for the optimum design of a new irrigation system and better management of an existing irrigation system. The design and management problems are highly constrained optimization problems. Special operators are developed for handling the large number of constraints in the representation and fitness evaluation stages of the genetic algorithm. The performance of the developed genetic algorithm is assessed in comparison to traditional optimization techniques. It is shown that the methodology developed performs better than the linear programming method and that solutions generated by the modified genetic algorithm show an improvement in capital cost. The method is also shown to perform better in satisfying the constraints. Comparison between on-demand and rotation delivery scheduling shows that a greater than 50% saving can be achieved in total cost at the cost of reducing flexibility in the irrigation time. Finally, it is shown that minimizing standard deviation of flow in pipes does not result in the best distribution, and therefore minimum cost, neither for systems with uniform flows or those with large variations in discharge at hydrants.
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