Abstract
The interest in wastewater monitoring is always growing, with applications mainly aimed at detection of pollutants and at the environmental epidemiological surveillance. However, it often happens that the strategies proposed to manage these problems are inapplicable due to the lack of information on the hydraulics of the systems. To overcome this problem, the present paper develops and proposes a topological backtracking strategy for the optimal monitoring of sewer networks, which acts by subrogating the hydraulic information with the geometric ones, e.g., diameter and slope, thus not requiring any hydraulic simulation. The topological backtracking approach aims at evaluating an impact coefficient for each node of the network used to face with the problems of sensor location and network coverage for purposes related to the spread of contaminants and pathogens. Finally, the positioning of the sensors for each monitoring scheme is addressed by a priority rank, based on the efficiency of each sensor in terms of network coverage with respect to a specific weight (e.g., length, flow). The main goal is to design a monitoring scheme that provide the required coverage of the network by minimizing the number of sensors with respect to specific measurement threshold value.The results show the effectiveness of the strategy in supporting the optimal design with the topological-based backtracking approach without the necessity of performing hydraulic simulations, with great advantage in terms of required data and computational time.
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