Contamination Warning in Water Networks: General Mixed-Integer Linear Models for Sensor Location DesignSource: Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2006:;Volume ( 132 ):;issue: 004Author:Marco Propato
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9496(2006)132:4(225)Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
Abstract: A mixed-integer linear program is proposed to identify optimal sensor locations for early warning against accidental and intentional contaminations in drinking water distribution systems. The general model can be applied to unsteady hydraulic conditions. Furthermore, it may accommodate different design objectives whose problem formulations vary only by the cost function coefficients while decision variables and linear constraints remain identical. Such a feature is very important since several requirements may be factors for practical design of warning systems. Linear constraint matrix properties show that the solution may often be found at the root (no branching). If not, a procedure is proposed to identify a significant set of discrete decision variables whose integrality constraints can be always relaxed. This result is coupled with good data preprocessing to minimize auxiliary continuous variables and constraints, allowing for efficient computation and increasing model applicability to large problems. The methodology is illustrated on a small and a midsize network.
|
Show full item record
| contributor author | Marco Propato | |
| date accessioned | 2017-05-08T21:08:07Z | |
| date available | 2017-05-08T21:08:07Z | |
| date copyright | July 2006 | |
| date issued | 2006 | |
| identifier other | %28asce%290733-9496%282006%29132%3A4%28225%29.pdf | |
| identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/40012 | |
| description abstract | A mixed-integer linear program is proposed to identify optimal sensor locations for early warning against accidental and intentional contaminations in drinking water distribution systems. The general model can be applied to unsteady hydraulic conditions. Furthermore, it may accommodate different design objectives whose problem formulations vary only by the cost function coefficients while decision variables and linear constraints remain identical. Such a feature is very important since several requirements may be factors for practical design of warning systems. Linear constraint matrix properties show that the solution may often be found at the root (no branching). If not, a procedure is proposed to identify a significant set of discrete decision variables whose integrality constraints can be always relaxed. This result is coupled with good data preprocessing to minimize auxiliary continuous variables and constraints, allowing for efficient computation and increasing model applicability to large problems. The methodology is illustrated on a small and a midsize network. | |
| publisher | American Society of Civil Engineers | |
| title | Contamination Warning in Water Networks: General Mixed-Integer Linear Models for Sensor Location Design | |
| type | Journal Paper | |
| journal volume | 132 | |
| journal issue | 4 | |
| journal title | Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management | |
| identifier doi | 10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9496(2006)132:4(225) | |
| tree | Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2006:;Volume ( 132 ):;issue: 004 | |
| contenttype | Fulltext |