4.6 Article

A Sewer Dynamic Model for Simulating Reaction Rates of Different Compounds in Urban Sewer Pipe

Journal

WATER
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w13111580

Keywords

urban sewer pipe; sewer dynamic model; heterotrophic biofilm; reaction rate; consumption rate

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of R.O.C. [MOST 108-2221-E-142-003-MY2]

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The study established a Sewer Dynamic Model (SDM) to describe reactions in a pilot sewer pipe, validated the model by calculating consistency between simulation and observation values, and analyzed reaction rates. The results provide insight into reaction rates of different compounds in urban sewer pipes and serve as a reference for policy-making and regulation in urban water network modeling.
A sewer dynamic model (SDM), an innovative use of combined models, was established to describe the reactions of compounds in a pilot sewer pipe. The set of ordinary differential equations in the SDM was solved simultaneously using the fourth-order Runge-Kutta algorithm. The SDM was validated by calculating the consistency between the simulation and observation values. After the SDM was validated, the reaction rate was analyzed. For heterotrophs in the water phase and biofilm, their growth rates were greater than the organism decay rate. For ammonia, the supply rate was greater than the consumption rate at the initial time, but the supply rate was smaller than the consumption rate from the 3rd hour. The supply rate was smaller than the consumption rate for the other six compounds. The supply rate of oxygen was smaller than the consumption rate before the 4th hour because of the microorganism activities, and, subsequently, the supply rate was greater than the consumption rate after the 4th hour because of reaeration. The results of this study provide an insight into the reaction rates of different compounds in urban sewer pipes and an urban water network modeling reference for policymaking and regulation.

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