Module-77A: Basic Unit Operations and Unit Processes For Surface Water Treatment, Distribution of Water
Module-77A: Basic Unit Operations and Unit Processes For Surface Water Treatment, Distribution of Water
Module-77A: Basic Unit Operations and Unit Processes For Surface Water Treatment, Distribution of Water
MODULE- 77A
Basic unit operations and unit processes for surface water treatment,
distribution of water.
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The purpose of distribution system is to deliver water to consumer with appropriate quality,
quantity and pressure. Distribution system is used to describe collectively the facilities used
to supply water from its source to the point of usage.
The distribution pipes are generally laid below the road pavements, and as such their layouts
generally follow the layouts of roads. There are, in general, four different types of pipe
networks; any one of which either singly or in combinations, can be used for a particular
place. They are:
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Distribution Reservoirs
Distribution reservoirs, also called service reservoirs, are the storage reservoirs, which store
the treated water for supplying water during emergencies (such as during fires, repairs, etc.)
and also to help in absorbing the hourly fluctuations in the normal water demand.
Types of Reservoirs
1. Underground reservoirs.
2. Small ground level reservoirs.
3. Large ground level reservoirs.
4. Overhead tanks.
1. Balancing Storage: The quantity of water required to be stored in the reservoir for
equalizing or balancing fluctuating demand against constant supply is known as the
balancing storage (or equalizing or operating storage). The balance storage can be
worked out by mass curve method.
2. Breakdown Storage: The breakdown storage or often called emergency storage is the
storage preserved in order to tide over the emergencies posed by the failure of pumps,
electricity, or any other mechanism driving the pumps. A value of about 25% of the
total storage capacity of reservoirs, or 1.5 to 2 times of the average hourly supply,
may be considered as enough provision for accounting this storage.
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3. Fire Storage: The third component of the total reservoir storage is the fire storage.
This provision takes care of the requirements of water for extinguishing fires. A
provision of 1 to 4 per person per day is sufficient to meet the requirement.
The total reservoir storage can finally be worked out by adding all the three storages.
Analysis of water distribution system includes determining quantities of flow and head losses
in the various pipe lines, and resulting residual pressures. In any pipe network, the following
two conditions must be satisfied:
1. The algebraic sum of pressure drops around a closed loop must be zero, i.e. there can
be no discontinuity in pressure.
2. The flow entering a junction must be equal to the flow leaving that junction; i.e. the
law of continuity must be satisfied.
Based on these two basic principles, the pipe networks are generally solved by the methods of
successive approximation. The widely used method of pipe network analysis is the Hardy-
Cross method.
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