Abstract

The classic pump scheduling or optimal water flow (OWF) problem for water distribution networks (WDNs) minimizes the cost of power consumption for a given WDN over a fixed time horizon. In its exact form, the OWF is a computationally challenging mixed-integer nonlinear program (MINLP). It is complicated by nonlinear equality constraints that model network physics, discrete variables that model operational controls, and intertemporal constraints that model changes to storage devices. To address the computational challenges of the OWF, this paper develops tight polyhedral relaxations of the original MINLP, derives novel valid inequalities (or cuts) using duality theory, and implements novel optimization-based bound tightening and cut generation procedures. The efficacy of each new method is rigorously evaluated by measuring empirical improvements in OWF primal and dual bounds over 45 literature instances. The evaluation suggests that our relaxation improvements, model strengthening techniques, and a thoughtfully selected polyhedral relaxation partitioning scheme can substantially improve OWF primal and dual bounds, especially when compared with similar relaxation-based techniques that do not leverage these new methods. History: Accepted by David Alderson, Area Editor for Network Optimization: Algorithms & Applications. Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Advanced Grid Modeling project, Coordinated Planning and Operation of Water and Power Infrastructures for Increased Resilience and Reliability. Incorporation of the PolyhedralRelaxations Julia package was supported by Los Alamos National Laboratory’s Directed Research and Development program under the project Fast, Linear Programming-Based Algorithms with Solution Quality Guarantees for Nonlinear Optimal Control Problems [Grant 20220006ER]. All work at Los Alamos National Laboratory was conducted under the auspices of the National Nuclear Security Administration of the U.S. DOE, Contract No. 89233218CNA000001. This work was also authored in part by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, operated by the Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC, for the U.S. DOE, Contract No. DE-AC36-08GO28308. Supplemental Material: The software that supports the findings of this study is available within the paper and its Supplemental Information ( https://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/suppl/10.1287/ijoc.2022.0233 ) as well as from the IJOC GitHub software repository ( https://github.com/INFORMSJoC/2022.0233 ). The complete IJOC Software and Data Repository is available at https://informsjoc.github.io/ .

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