It is estimated that about 20% of treated drinking water is lost through distribution pipeline leakages in the United States. Pipeline leakage detection is a top priority for water utilities across the globe as leaks increase operational energy consumption and could also develop into potentially catastrophic water main breaks, if left unaddressed. Leakage detection is a laborious task often limited by the financial and human resources that utilities can afford. Many conventional leak detection techniques also only offer a snapshot indication of leakage presence. Furthermore, the reliability of many leakage detection techniques on plastic pipelines that are increasingly preferred for drinking water applications is questionable. As part of a smart water utility framework, this paper proposes and validates a hydraulic model-based technique for detecting and assessing the severity of leakages in buried water pipelines through monitoring of pressure from across the water distribution system (WDS). The envisioned smart water utility framework entails the capabilities to collect water consumption data from a limited number of WDS nodes and pressure data from a limited number of pressure monitoring stations placed across the WDS. A popular benchmark WDS is initially modified by inducing leakages through addition of orifice nodes. The leakage severity is controlled using emitter coefficients of the orifice nodes. WDS pressure data for various sets of demands is subsequently gathered from locations where pressure monitoring stations are to be placed in that modified distribution network. An evolutionary optimization algorithm is subsequently used to predict the emitter coefficients so as to determine the leakage severities based on the hydraulic dependency of the monitored pressure data on various sets of nodal demands. Artificial neural networks (ANNs) are employed to mimic the popular hydraulic solver EPANET 2.2 for high computational efficiency. The goals of this study are to: (1) validate the proof of concept of the proposed modeling approach for detecting and assessing the severity of leakages and (2) evaluate the sensitivity of the prediction accuracy to number of pressure monitoring stations and number of demand nodes at which consumption data is gathered and used. This study offers new value to prioritize pipes for rehabilitation by predicting leakages through a hydraulic model-based approach. 
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                            A Sequential Pressure-Based Algorithm for Data-Driven Leakage Identification and Model-Based Localization in Water Distribution Networks
                        
                    
    
            Leakages in water distribution networks (WDNs) are estimated to globally cost 39 billion USD per year and cause water and revenue losses, infrastructure degradation, and other cascading effects. Their impacts can be prevented and mitigated with prompt identification and accurate leak localization. In this work, we propose the leakage identification and localization algorithm (LILA), a pressure-based algorithm for data-driven leakage identification and model-based localization in WDNs. First, LILA identifies potential leakages via semi-supervised linear regression of pairwise sensor pressure data and provides the location of their nearest sensors. Second, LILA locates leaky pipes relying on an initial set of candidate pipes and a simulation-based optimization framework with iterative linear and mixed-integer linear programming. LILA is tested on data from the L-Town network devised for the Battle of Leakage Detection and Isolation Methods. Results show that LILA can identify all leakages included in the data set and locate them within a maximum distance of 374 m from their real location. Abrupt leakages are identified immediately or within 2 h, while more time is required to raise alarms on incipient leakages. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 1919228
- PAR ID:
- 10343901
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of water resources planning and management
- Volume:
- 148
- Issue:
- 6
- ISSN:
- 0733-9496
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 04022025
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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