DocumentCode
1892906
Title
Improving efficiency of existing water distribution networks by centralized monitoring
Author
Jayasekara, P.G. ; Illangasinghe, D.K. ; Dahanayake, J.K. ; Wickramage, K. ; Munasinghe, Rohan
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electron. & Telecommun. Eng., Moratuwa Univ., Moratuwa
fYear
2007
fDate
4-6 Dec. 2007
Firstpage
25
Lastpage
30
Abstract
The optimum distribution of treated pipe-borne water is a critical requirement in countries which have a deficit production in comparison with the demand. However, in 3rd world countries, it is not feasible to design the entire water distribution network as a whole, to enable near-optimized delivery, due to economic constraints. The current practice in such countries is to operate the nodes of the water distribution network, such as pump houses and water towers, in isolation, based on ad hoc criteria. Improper co-ordination of these nodes leads to wastage and inefficiencies in the utilization of the scarce resource of treated water. Hence the challenge lies in improving the water distribution process via a network that has not been inherently designed to support optimum distribution. The proposed system presents a solution to this predicament by centrally monitoring and controlling the functionality of these points of distribution. It is a low cost, locally developed system which can replace the PLC based automation systems currently deployed, simultaneously providing the additional functionality of remote control. It is operable in 3 interchangeable modes: Manual, Auto and Remote. The Remote Mode, which is a novel feature unavailable in the existing system, enables a central server to monitor the operation of the total network and issue supervisory commands to regulate the functionality or even to take over the control of a remote pump house, if necessary. It also facilitates the centralization of skilled labor.
Keywords
condition monitoring; flow control; telecontrol; water supply; PLC based automation systems; central server; centralized monitoring; economic constraints; pump houses; remote control; remote mode; skilled labor; supervisory commands; treated pipe-borne water; water distribution networks; water towers; Automatic control; Automation; Centralized control; Control systems; Cost function; Poles and towers; Production; Programmable control; Remote monitoring; Water resources; Centralized Control; Near-Optimal Scheduling; Programmable Logic Controller (PLC); Remote Monitoring; Remote Supervision;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information and Automation for Sustainability, 2007. ICIAFS 2007. Third International Conference on
Conference_Location
Melbourne, VIC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-1899-2
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-1900-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICIAFS.2007.4544775
Filename
4544775
Link To Document