45 research outputs found

    Multiobjective optimization of cluster-scale urban water systems investigating alternative water sources and level of decentralization

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    In many regions, conventional water supplies are unable to meet projected consumer demand. Consequently, interest has arisen in integrated urban water systems, which involve the reclamation or harvesting of alternative, localized water sources. However, this makes the planning and design of water infrastructure more difficult, as multiple objectives need to be considered, water sources need to be selected from a number of alternatives, and end uses of these sources need to be specified. In addition, the scale at which each treatment, collection, and distribution network should operate needs to be investigated. In order to deal with this complexity, a framework for planning and designing water infrastructure taking into account integrated urban water management principles is presented in this paper and applied to a rural greenfield development. Various options for water supply, and the scale at which they operate were investigated in order to determine the life-cycle trade-offs between water savings, cost, and GHG emissions as calculated from models calibrated using Australian data. The decision space includes the choice of water sources, storage tanks, treatment facilities, and pipes for water conveyance. For each water system analyzed, infrastructure components were sized using multiobjective genetic algorithms. The results indicate that local water sources are competitive in terms of cost and GHG emissions, and can reduce demand on the potable system by as much as 54%. Economies of scale in treatment dominated the diseconomies of scale in collection and distribution of water. Therefore, water systems that connect large clusters of households tend to be more cost efficient and have lower GHG emissions. In addition, water systems that recycle wastewater tended to perform better than systems that captured roof-runoff. Through these results, the framework was shown to be effective at identifying near optimal trade-offs between competing objectives, thereby enabling informed decisions to be made when planning water systems for greenfield developments.J. P. Newman, G. C. Dandy, and H. R. Maie

    Using the rational method for design in complex urban basins

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    Because of its simplicity the rational method is still frequently used in urban planning and design. In this paper using the time-area method and statistically derived design storms, the design peak flow is computed for urban basins of different complexity and compared with the design flow determined from the rational method. It is shown that the design flow is underestimated using the rational method unless a reduced time of concentration is used. The relation between travel times in different parts of a drainage system is used to correct the design flow computed by the traditional rational method

    Fractal analysis of high-resolution rainfall time series

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    Two-year series of 1-min rainfall intensities observed by rain gages at six differrent points are analyzed to obtain information about the fractal behavior of the rainfall distribution in time. First, the rainfall time series are investigated using a monodimensional fractal approach (simple scaling) by calculating the box and correlation dimensions, respectively. The results indicate scaling but with different dimensions for different time aggregation periods. The time periods where changes in dimension occur can be related to average rainfall event durations and average dry period lengths. Also, the dimension is shown to be a decreasing function of the rainfall intensity level. This suggests a multidimensional fractal behavior (multiscaling), and to test this hypothesis, the probability distribution/multiple scaling method was applied to the time series. The results confirm that the investigated rainfall time series display a multidimensional fractal behavior, at least within a significant part of the studied timescales, which indicates that the rainfall process can be described by a multiplicative cascade process. -Author

    An Approach to Models of Order-Disorder and Ising Lattices

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    The present paper develops the approach to the famous problem presented by L. Onsager (1944) and its further investigation proposed in a recent work by Z.-D. Zhang (2007). The above works give quaternion-based two- and three-dimensional (quantum) models of order-disorder transition and simple orthorhombic Ising lattices (1925). The general methods applied by Zhang refer to opening knots by a rotation in a higher dimensional space, introduction of weight factor (his Conjecture 1 and 2) and important commutators. The main objective of the present paper is to reformulate the algebraic part of the theory in terms of the quaternionic sequence of Jordan algebras and to look at some of the geometrical aspects of simple orthorhombic Ising-Onsager-Zhang lattices. The present authors discuss the relationship with Bethe-type fractals, Kikuchi-type fractals, and fractals of the algebraic structure and, moreover, the duality for fractal sets and lattice models on fractal sets. A simple description in terms of fractals corresponding to algebraic structure involving the quaternionic sequence (H(q)(4)) of P. Jordan's algebras appears to be possible. Physically we obtain models of (H(q)(4)) for q = 5 . 2(2) = 20 for the melting, q = 9 . 2(6) = 576 for binary alloys, and q = 13 . 2(10) = 13 312 for ternary alloys

    An Approach to Models of Order-Disorder and Ising Lattices

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    Aspects of computer modelling techniques for a semi-arid, small catchment in Tunisia.

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    Addresses the issue whether computer modelling techniques developed for humid climates are applicable in runoff forecasting in the semi-arid zone. Four different simulation models were applied to a partly urbanized catchment in northern Tunisia. Two of the models used were developed for urban runoff simulation (SWMM and ILLUDAS) and two for typical rural application (HBV and VANMOD). -Author
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