Advanced Geometrical Analysis of Water Distribution Networks (WDNs): A Comparison between Standard and Minimum Capital-Cost Designs

Author(s):  
Juan Carvajal ◽  
Andrés Ariza ◽  
Juan Saldarriaga
10.29007/lvbt ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniele Laucelli ◽  
Luigi Berardi ◽  
Antonietta Simone ◽  
Orazio Giustolisi

A new playful interface allowing a more intuitive understanding of real-life problems is the Serious Gaming, which combines video game and utility functions addressed to problems other than the mere entertainment. The use of Serious Gaming allows having fun while favoring the learning process related to specific technical fields. This paper presents the results of using Serious Gaming within a university classroom of 26 students to solve an engineering problem, i.e. the pipe sizing of several water distribution networks. It relates to five benchmark water distribution networks, and students were asked to find the optimal value of pipe diameters to match minimum capital cost of pipes and good average pressure. Therefore, the players/students can be seen as decision makers, from a real-life standpoint. The paper has multiple aims, such as investigating the gaming approach usefulness in consolidating/learning the main concepts of network hydraulics and bringing users closer to real-life complexity of engineering problems where different technical aspects must be considered at the same time.


2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 16697-16702
Author(s):  
I. Santos-Ruiz ◽  
J. Blesa ◽  
V. Puig ◽  
F.R. López-Estrada

2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Enrico Creaco ◽  
Giacomo Galuppini ◽  
Alberto Campisano ◽  
Marco Franchini

This paper presents a two-step methodology for the stochastic generation of snapshot peak demand scenarios in water distribution networks (WDNs), each of which is based on a single combination of demand values at WDN nodes. The methodology describes the hourly demand at both nodal and WDN scales through a beta probabilistic model, which is flexible enough to suit both small and large demand aggregations in terms of mean, standard deviation, and skewness. The first step of the methodology enables generating separately the peak demand samples at WDN nodes. Then, in the second step, the nodal demand samples are consistently reordered to build snapshot demand scenarios for the WDN, while respecting the rank cross-correlations at lag 0. The applications concerned the one-year long dataset of about 1000 user demand values from the district of Soccavo, Naples (Italy). Best-fit scaling equations were constructed to express the main statistics of peak demand as a function of the average demand value on a long-time horizon, i.e., one year. The results of applications to four case studies proved the methodology effective and robust for various numbers and sizes of users.


2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 16691-16696
Author(s):  
Luis Romero ◽  
Joaquim Blesa ◽  
Vicenç Puig ◽  
Gabriela Cembrano ◽  
Carlos Trapiello

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