Searched for: subject%3A%22water%22
(1 - 8 of 8)
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Bailey, O. (author), Arnot, T. C. (author), Blokker, E. J.M. (author), Kapelan, Z. (author), Vreeburg, J. (author), Hofman, J. A.M.H. (author)
Population growth and climate change place a strain on water resources; hence, there are growing initiatives to reduce household water use. UKWIR (2016) have a stated aim to halve water abstraction by 2050. This will significantly reduce inflow to sewer systems and increase wastewater concentration. This work presents a new stochastic sewer...
journal article 2019
document
Zlatanovic, L. (author), Knezev, A (author), van der Hoek, J.P. (author), Vreeburg, Jan (author)
Drinking water and fire safety are strongly bonded to each other. Actual drinking water demand and fire flows are both delivered through the same network, and are both devoted to public health and safety. In The Netherlands, the discussion about fire flows supplied by the drinking water networks has drawn fire fighters and drinking water...
journal article 2018
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Agudelo-Vera, Claudia (author), Blokker, M (author), Vreeburg, J (author), Vogelaar, H. (author), Hillegers, S (author), van der Hoek, J.P. (author)
A drinking water distribution system (DWDS) is a critical and a costly asset with a long lifetime. Drinking water demand is likely to change in the coming decades. Quantifying these changes involves large uncertainties. This paper proposes a stress test on the robustness of existing DWDS under changing drinking water demands. The stress test...
journal article 2016
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Agudelo-Vera, C. (author), Blokker, M. (author), Vreeburg, J. (author), Bongard, T. (author), Hillegers, S. (author), Van der Hoek, J.P. (author)
A methodology to determine the robustness of the drinking water distribution system is proposed. The performance of three networks under ten future demand scenarios was tested, using head loss and residence time as indicators. The scenarios consider technological and demographic changes. Daily patterns were simulated with SIMDEUM for each...
journal article 2014
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Moerman, A. (author), Blokker, M. (author), Vreeburg, J. (author), Van der Hoek, J.P. (author)
Domestic water supply systems are the final stage of the transport process to deliver potable water to the customers’ tap. Under the influence of temperature, residence time and pipe materials the drinking water quality can change while the water passes the domestic drinking water system. According to the Dutch Drinking Water Act the drinking...
journal article 2014
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Bakker, M. (author), Rajewicz, T. (author), Kien, H. (author), Vreeburg, J.H.G. (author), Rietveld, L.C. (author)
Conventional automatic production flow control and pump pressure control of water supply systems are robust and simple: production flow is controlled based on the level in the clear water reservoir and pump pressure is controlled on a static set-point. Recently, more advanced computer-based control methods were developed in which production flow...
journal article 2014
document
Bakker, M. (author), Rajewicz, T. (author), Kien, H. (author), Vreeburg, J.H.G. (author), Rietveld, L.C. (author)
WTP Gruszczyn supplies drinking water to a part of the city of Pozna?, in the Midwest of Poland. For the optimal automatic pressure control of the clear water pumping station, nine pressure measuring points were installed in the distribution network, and an active pressure control model was developed and installed. This model is a hybrid form of...
conference paper 2013
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Vreeburg, J.H.G. (author)
The quality of drinking water in the Netherlands meets high standards as is annually reported by the Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment (VROM)(Versteegh and Dik, 2006). Also the water companies themselves report in the voluntary Benchmark that water quality is one of the least discriminating factors as all the companies ...
doctoral thesis 2007
Searched for: subject%3A%22water%22
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