jakeinuganda
Civil/Environmental
- May 7, 2012
- 6
Hello,
I'm working on rural water supply with an NGO in SW Uganda and I have none of my engineering books with me and very limited internet access, so resources are very limited. Also, I haven't done much hydraulics since about 2004, so while it's in my head somewhere, I'm a bit rusty.
Currently, I'm working on a system to convey rainwater from the roof of a large building into small elevated tanks at the building so that it can flow from them by gravity through small underground pipes to a large tank about 30m away (and roughly ~3m below the tanks). Two small elevates tanks will capture water from two areas of the building, they will be piped to the base of the storage tank, and then combined into a larger pipe to flow into the storage tank (see attached picture). Funds are limited, so I want design for minimal expense. Obviously, this will mean determining the most efficient combination of small elevated storage tank capacity and underground pipe size for the gravity flow connection. The pipeline will extend straight down from the small elevated tank, turn once underground toward the large storage tank, and rise straight up to the inlet at the top of the large storage tank.
I have an estimate for the peak inflows based on observed rainfall data, so I can size the smaller tanks and the connection pipes if I can model the system in regard to various small storage tank sizes and pipe diameters.
I've made a model with Pipe Expert (picture of model profile included) and I can spec the materials based on the results, but I'm unsure about one thing: these pipes will remain dry most of the time and will only fill when it rains - do I need to be concerned with the a possible air trap problem with the initial vertical drop of 4m??? How can that be modeled??
I would greatly appreciate any help or advice!
Cheers,
Jake
US Peace Corps Volunteer
Rukungiri, Uganda
I'm working on rural water supply with an NGO in SW Uganda and I have none of my engineering books with me and very limited internet access, so resources are very limited. Also, I haven't done much hydraulics since about 2004, so while it's in my head somewhere, I'm a bit rusty.
Currently, I'm working on a system to convey rainwater from the roof of a large building into small elevated tanks at the building so that it can flow from them by gravity through small underground pipes to a large tank about 30m away (and roughly ~3m below the tanks). Two small elevates tanks will capture water from two areas of the building, they will be piped to the base of the storage tank, and then combined into a larger pipe to flow into the storage tank (see attached picture). Funds are limited, so I want design for minimal expense. Obviously, this will mean determining the most efficient combination of small elevated storage tank capacity and underground pipe size for the gravity flow connection. The pipeline will extend straight down from the small elevated tank, turn once underground toward the large storage tank, and rise straight up to the inlet at the top of the large storage tank.
I have an estimate for the peak inflows based on observed rainfall data, so I can size the smaller tanks and the connection pipes if I can model the system in regard to various small storage tank sizes and pipe diameters.
I've made a model with Pipe Expert (picture of model profile included) and I can spec the materials based on the results, but I'm unsure about one thing: these pipes will remain dry most of the time and will only fill when it rains - do I need to be concerned with the a possible air trap problem with the initial vertical drop of 4m??? How can that be modeled??
I would greatly appreciate any help or advice!
Cheers,
Jake
US Peace Corps Volunteer
Rukungiri, Uganda