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    Revisiting the Water Quality Sensor Placement Problem: Optimizing Network Observability and State Estimation Metrics

    Source: Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2021:;Volume ( 147 ):;issue: 007::page 04021040-1
    Author:
    Ahmad F. Taha
    ,
    Shen Wang
    ,
    Yi Guo
    ,
    Tyler H. Summers
    ,
    Nikolaos Gatsis
    ,
    Marcio H. Giacomoni
    ,
    Ahmed A. Abokifa
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0001374
    Publisher: ASCE
    Abstract: Real-time water quality (WQ) sensors in water distribution networks (WDN) have the potential to enable network-wide observability of water quality indicators, contamination event detection, and closed-loop feedback control of WQ dynamics. To that end, prior research has investigated a wide range of methods that guide the geographic placement of WQ sensors. These methods assign a metric for fixed sensor placement (SP) followed by metric-optimization to obtain optimal SP. These metrics include minimizing intrusion detection time, thereby minimizing the expected population and amount of contaminated water affected by an intrusion event. In contrast to the literature, the objective of this paper is to provide a computational method that considers the overlooked metric of state estimation and network-wide observability of the WQ dynamics. This metric finds the optimal WQ sensor placement that minimizes the state estimation error via the Kalman filter for noisy WQ dynamics—a metric that quantifies WDN observability. To that end, the state-space dynamics of WQ states for an entire WDN are given and the observability-driven sensor placement algorithm is presented. The algorithm takes into account the time-varying nature of WQ dynamics due to changes in the hydraulic profile—a collection of hydraulic states including heads (pressures) at nodes and flow rates in links that are caused by a demand profile over a certain period of time. Thorough case studies are given, highlighting key findings, observations, and recommendations for WDN operators. Github codes are included for reproducibility.
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      Revisiting the Water Quality Sensor Placement Problem: Optimizing Network Observability and State Estimation Metrics

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4270607
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    contributor authorAhmad F. Taha
    contributor authorShen Wang
    contributor authorYi Guo
    contributor authorTyler H. Summers
    contributor authorNikolaos Gatsis
    contributor authorMarcio H. Giacomoni
    contributor authorAhmed A. Abokifa
    date accessioned2022-01-31T23:56:12Z
    date available2022-01-31T23:56:12Z
    date issued7/1/2021
    identifier other%28ASCE%29WR.1943-5452.0001374.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4270607
    description abstractReal-time water quality (WQ) sensors in water distribution networks (WDN) have the potential to enable network-wide observability of water quality indicators, contamination event detection, and closed-loop feedback control of WQ dynamics. To that end, prior research has investigated a wide range of methods that guide the geographic placement of WQ sensors. These methods assign a metric for fixed sensor placement (SP) followed by metric-optimization to obtain optimal SP. These metrics include minimizing intrusion detection time, thereby minimizing the expected population and amount of contaminated water affected by an intrusion event. In contrast to the literature, the objective of this paper is to provide a computational method that considers the overlooked metric of state estimation and network-wide observability of the WQ dynamics. This metric finds the optimal WQ sensor placement that minimizes the state estimation error via the Kalman filter for noisy WQ dynamics—a metric that quantifies WDN observability. To that end, the state-space dynamics of WQ states for an entire WDN are given and the observability-driven sensor placement algorithm is presented. The algorithm takes into account the time-varying nature of WQ dynamics due to changes in the hydraulic profile—a collection of hydraulic states including heads (pressures) at nodes and flow rates in links that are caused by a demand profile over a certain period of time. Thorough case studies are given, highlighting key findings, observations, and recommendations for WDN operators. Github codes are included for reproducibility.
    publisherASCE
    titleRevisiting the Water Quality Sensor Placement Problem: Optimizing Network Observability and State Estimation Metrics
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume147
    journal issue7
    journal titleJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0001374
    journal fristpage04021040-1
    journal lastpage04021040-13
    page13
    treeJournal of Water Resources Planning and Management:;2021:;Volume ( 147 ):;issue: 007
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    نرم افزار کتابخانه دیجیتال "دی اسپیس" فارسی شده توسط یابش برای کتابخانه های ایرانی | تماس با یابش
    yabeshDSpacePersian