swazimatt
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 19, 2009
- 278
I have been tasked with designing an interim pump station that will discharge into an attenuation tank. I have just started looking into the design and see a few possible pitfalls.
The pump station is an interim pump station that will be upgraded in the future when the development grows and the receiving gravity reticulation has been upgraded. The pump will need to pump at about 65l/s to a high point (this high point will ultimately become an air valve location and the rising main extended) however the receiving gravity retic at this point only has capacity for 13 l/s. The prelim design (carried out by another firm, who will also be reviewing our design for the council)put forward is to have an attenuation tank at this point that will hold the peak flows and discharge at 13 l/s max.
Now looking at this i see that i can determine the orifice size using bernoulli's equation but if i set the flow at 13 l/s at tank full I will have a lower flow at lower tank levels (probably not a problem until i start calculating the tank size?). I am think i will need to have an overflow system in case of pipe blockages as my initial sizing had the orifice at about 75mm diameter, so possibly a larger diameter orifice at a higher level. I suspect i will need a Tee inlet to the orifice to reduce the solids and scum entering the outlet pipe (similar to the outlet from a septic tank) and an air vent out the top of the tank.
The intention is to also try to design this tank in such a way that it can be repurposed as an air valve chamber in the future.
Thinking about it now i will investigate the options of using the pump station emergency storage as an alternative and have the pump set to 13 l/s however i suspect this may result in too many pump cycles
is there anything that I should keep in mind going forward. Any of you had to design something similar?
The pump station is an interim pump station that will be upgraded in the future when the development grows and the receiving gravity reticulation has been upgraded. The pump will need to pump at about 65l/s to a high point (this high point will ultimately become an air valve location and the rising main extended) however the receiving gravity retic at this point only has capacity for 13 l/s. The prelim design (carried out by another firm, who will also be reviewing our design for the council)put forward is to have an attenuation tank at this point that will hold the peak flows and discharge at 13 l/s max.
Now looking at this i see that i can determine the orifice size using bernoulli's equation but if i set the flow at 13 l/s at tank full I will have a lower flow at lower tank levels (probably not a problem until i start calculating the tank size?). I am think i will need to have an overflow system in case of pipe blockages as my initial sizing had the orifice at about 75mm diameter, so possibly a larger diameter orifice at a higher level. I suspect i will need a Tee inlet to the orifice to reduce the solids and scum entering the outlet pipe (similar to the outlet from a septic tank) and an air vent out the top of the tank.
The intention is to also try to design this tank in such a way that it can be repurposed as an air valve chamber in the future.
Thinking about it now i will investigate the options of using the pump station emergency storage as an alternative and have the pump set to 13 l/s however i suspect this may result in too many pump cycles
is there anything that I should keep in mind going forward. Any of you had to design something similar?