A metric for drinking water service reservoir performance as a sink or source of material

Author:

Kennedy (Doronina) Anastasia12ORCID,Husband Stewart1ORCID,Boxall Joby1ORCID,Speight Vanessa1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. a Department of Civil and Structural Engineering, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK

2. b Present address: Panton McLeod Ltd, Selkirk, UK

Abstract

ABSTRACT Service reservoirs (SRs) are a critical component of drinking water distribution systems that impact water quality. There are no performance measures to quantify or understand this impact. By applying the concept of sink or source behaviour to describe the processes of material accumulation and mobilisation within SRs, this research develops a practical metric to facilitate assessment and quantification of SR performance. It is demonstrated how a few weeks of continuous data from instrumentation deployment at both inlet and outlet of SRs is sufficient to reveal valuable insight into SR and network performance. Through real-world applications, we provide evidence that the metric was able to track SR performance showing both beneficial and detrimental impacts on water quality, as well as quantifying seasonality and the benefits of SR cleaning. Such insight is invaluable for proactive, justifiable, and targeted decisions on the location and frequency of maintenance and management interventions.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Centre for Doctoral Training STREAM

TWENTY65

Anglian Water Services Limited

Northumbrian Water

Scottish Water

Dwr Cymru Welsh Water

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Reference51 articles.

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3. Evaluation of Iron Release Models for Water Distribution Systems

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