An effective and comprehensive model for optimal rehabilitation of separate sanitary sewer systems

Sci Total Environ. 2018 Jan 15:612:1042-1057. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.08.315. Epub 2017 Sep 7.

Abstract

In the field of rehabilitation of separate sanitary sewer systems, a large number of technical, environmental, and economic aspects are often relevant in the decision-making process, which may be modelled as a multi-objective optimization problem. Examples are those related with the operation and assessment of networks, optimization of structural, hydraulic, sanitary, and environmental performance, rehabilitation programmes, and execution works. In particular, the cost of investment, operation and maintenance needed to reduce or eliminate Infiltration from the underground water table and Inflows of storm water surface runoff (I/I) using rehabilitation techniques or related methods can be significantly lower than the cost of transporting and treating these flows throughout the lifespan of the systems or period studied. This paper presents a comprehensive I/I cost-benefit approach for rehabilitation that explicitly considers all elements of the systems and shows how the approximation is incorporated as an objective function in a general evolutionary multi-objective optimization model. It takes into account network performance and wastewater treatment costs, average values of several input variables, and rates that can reflect the adoption of different predictable or limiting scenarios. The approach can be used as a practical and fast tool to support decision-making in sewer network rehabilitation in any phase of a project. The fundamental aspects, modelling, implementation details and preliminary results of a two-objective optimization rehabilitation model using a genetic algorithm, with a second objective function related to the structural condition of the network and the service failure risk, are presented. The basic approach is applied to three real world cases studies of sanitary sewerage systems in Coimbra and the results show the simplicity, suitability, effectiveness, and usefulness of the approximation implemented and of the objective function proposed.

Keywords: Cost–benefit approach; Evolutionary algorithms; Infiltration/inflow; Multi-objective optimization; Sewer rehabilitation; Wastewater treatment.

MeSH terms

  • Drainage, Sanitary*
  • Groundwater*
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Portugal
  • Wastewater
  • Water Movements*

Substances

  • Waste Water