Hi 362: Infrastructure Design and Construction 2021/2 Lecture 5: Sewerage System Design
Hi 362: Infrastructure Design and Construction 2021/2 Lecture 5: Sewerage System Design
Hi 362: Infrastructure Design and Construction 2021/2 Lecture 5: Sewerage System Design
2021/2
LECTURE 5: SEWERAGE SYSTEM DESIGN
• Sewerage system
• Classification of sewerage
• Sewerage design
o Quantity of sewage
o Channel sizing
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SEWERAGE SYSTEM
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SEWERAGE SYSTEM
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SEWERAGE SYSTEM
Sanitary wastewater
Commercial wastewater
Industrial wastewater
Agricultural and surface runoff
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SEWERAGE SYSTEM
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CLASSIFICATION OF SEWERAGE SYSTEM
Separate system
• It has small quantity of sewage which results in economic
design of waste water treatment plant.
• It is cheaper than combined system (construction and
operation cost)
• Self cleaning velocity is a problem due to small quantity of
sewage, therefore flushing is required at various points
• Storm water may enter sanitary sewer and cause
overflowing and heavy load to the treatment plant
• Maintenance expensive (double system). 8
CLASSIFICATION OF SEWERAGE SYSTEM
Combined system
• Overcome the overflow effect
• Less cost of construction
• Storm water helps to provide self cleaning velocity in the
system
• Low cost of operation since flushing of the system is not
required
• Leads to high volume of water to the treatment plant
• High cost of construction is needed because the pipes are
large 9
SEWERAGE SYSTEM
Channel Types
• Common types are
Rectangular channel
Trapezoidal channel
Rectangular channel
Circular channel
Trapezoidal channel
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SEWERAGE SYSTEM
Channel lining
• Channel can be lined or unlined
• Unlined channel can erode-dimensions affected.
Concrete culvert
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QUANTITY OF SEWAGE
Domestic wastewater
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QUANTITY OF SEWAGE
Domestic wastewater
Industrial
Qindustrlal = f(category of industry)
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SEWER SIZING
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SEWER SIZING
Design quantity of sewage and/or storm water
• Analytical combination of sewage and stormflow
Qtotal = Qstormwater + Qsewage
Qtotal = 11 Qsewage
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SEWER SIZING
Design quantity of sewage and/or storm water
• Sewers should be designed large enough to carry maximum
discharge while flowing
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SEWER SIZING
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SEWER SIZING
Economic cross sections
• Chezy equation
Where, Q = discharge in the section (m³/s)
CZ = Chezy’s roughness coefficient (m¹′² /s)
𝑄=𝐶 𝑍 . 𝐴. √ 𝑅 .𝑆
A = Flow area (m²)
R = Hydraulic radius (m)
S = Friction slope (m/m)
• Manning’s equation
Where, Q = discharge in the section (m³/s)
2
3 1
𝑅 2
n = Manning’s roughness (-)
𝑄= 𝐴 . .𝑆 A = Flow area (m²)
𝑛
R = Hydraulic radius (m)
S = Friction slope (m/m)
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SEWER SIZING
Economic cross sections
D 𝒃=𝟐
𝒚 𝒃=𝟐 𝟐
𝟐𝒚 ( √𝟏+𝒙 𝟐− 𝟐 𝒙 ) d
A
𝒚 ( 𝟐 √ 𝟏+𝒙 −𝟑 𝒙 )
𝑨= A
0.3 D
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SEWER SIZING
Self cleansing velocity
• Minimum velocity at which no solids get deposited in the sewer
• Required self cleansing velocity depends on types of materials
𝑄= 𝐴 .𝑉
Where,
Q = Discharge in the section (m³/s)
A = Flow area (m²)
V = Velocity of flow (m/s)
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SEWER SIZING
Channel friction slope
• By Conservation of Energy - consider the control volume of a
channel
𝐿
• Channel
friction
slope is
related to
Chezy and
Manning’s
equations
Channel slope, 22
Example 5-1
• The main sewer was designed to serve an area of 50km² with a
30-years population of 1 million people. The average waste
water flow rate is 80 l/cap/day and the maximum flow is 30%
more than average flow. What is the economic size of the
circular sewer if velocity of flow is 0.16 m/s ? State
assumptions made.
Solution
Qsewage = W X Pn X pf
Qdesign = Qsewage x 1.5
Qdesign = Area x Velocity
Area = 0.68 D ²
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Example 5-2
• Design a combined economic circular sewer (diameter, flow
depth and slope) with wetted cross section area of 0.72 m² for
conveying sewage of 0.13 m³/s. Assume that flow velocity can
cleanse both fine sand and clay. Manning’s n = 0.020. State
assumptions made.
Solution
Area = 0.68 D ²
Depth = 0.81 D
Velocity = Q/A
Hydraulic radius = 0.3 D
Slope in Velocity eqn
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REFERENCES
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End of Lecture 5
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