Overbudget
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 21, 2006
- 12
A sewer interceptor presently runs down a hill to a river bank where a pump station is located. The pump station pumps through a force main under the river which discharges into a manhole that is about 10 feet higher than the river. When the river floods, the pump station is inaccessible. The owner wants to relocate the pump station to the top of the hill where it will be easily accessible at all times.
The proposed pump station site is about 60' higher than the river and about 50' higher than the discharge point. The total length of the force main is about 7,400 lf, so the overall slope is about 0.0067. We could almost design this as a gravity sewer with an inverted siphon at the end, except for two things: 1) the last 1500 LF of the force main is gradually rising and 2)The owner wants to re-use the existing force main under the river - a single 12" heavy wall cast iron pipe. (we took wall coupons and ran a camera in it and it looks to be in good shape.)
Putting the pump station at the top of the hill would pose several issues: 1)80% of the volume of the force main will drain by gravity. With a conventional pump station, the amount of water pumped with each pumping cycle will be miniscule compared to the total volume of the force main. By the time that the batch of water reaches water at the bottom, it will have transitioned to open channel flow and we won't get a strong impulse of water to create scouring action in the force main under the river. 2)when the pump shuts off, there will be a siphon that will continue to draw water through the pump. 3)We will have to be careful about air valve placement in the force main.
Instead of a pumping station with pumps, what about a somewhat larger tank at the top of the hill, with a motorized or pneumatically acutated valve to allow a batch of water to flow out when the tank fills? I haven't looked at a hydraulic profile yet, but I believe that the flow could be driven by gravity alone, and sufficient velocities would be developed to get scouring velocity. The trick would be to size the force main correctly. Mechanically it could be very simple, and energy usage would be very low. The batch could be considerably larger than what you would pump in a typical pumping cycle, possibly large enough to fill the entire force main and give it a good flush each time. We would need a substantial air valve at the bottom.
Another idea would be to install an acutated valve at the location of the existing pump station, and allow a new "force main" to surcharge all or part way to the top of the hill. When full, the actuated valve would open and let the entire line flush through. This approach would elimminate air and water hammer issues.
We're still conceptual. In fact I haven't written the design scope of work yet. Could anyone offer any ideas or call out any issues that I'm missing?
thanks,
Ed
The proposed pump station site is about 60' higher than the river and about 50' higher than the discharge point. The total length of the force main is about 7,400 lf, so the overall slope is about 0.0067. We could almost design this as a gravity sewer with an inverted siphon at the end, except for two things: 1) the last 1500 LF of the force main is gradually rising and 2)The owner wants to re-use the existing force main under the river - a single 12" heavy wall cast iron pipe. (we took wall coupons and ran a camera in it and it looks to be in good shape.)
Putting the pump station at the top of the hill would pose several issues: 1)80% of the volume of the force main will drain by gravity. With a conventional pump station, the amount of water pumped with each pumping cycle will be miniscule compared to the total volume of the force main. By the time that the batch of water reaches water at the bottom, it will have transitioned to open channel flow and we won't get a strong impulse of water to create scouring action in the force main under the river. 2)when the pump shuts off, there will be a siphon that will continue to draw water through the pump. 3)We will have to be careful about air valve placement in the force main.
Instead of a pumping station with pumps, what about a somewhat larger tank at the top of the hill, with a motorized or pneumatically acutated valve to allow a batch of water to flow out when the tank fills? I haven't looked at a hydraulic profile yet, but I believe that the flow could be driven by gravity alone, and sufficient velocities would be developed to get scouring velocity. The trick would be to size the force main correctly. Mechanically it could be very simple, and energy usage would be very low. The batch could be considerably larger than what you would pump in a typical pumping cycle, possibly large enough to fill the entire force main and give it a good flush each time. We would need a substantial air valve at the bottom.
Another idea would be to install an acutated valve at the location of the existing pump station, and allow a new "force main" to surcharge all or part way to the top of the hill. When full, the actuated valve would open and let the entire line flush through. This approach would elimminate air and water hammer issues.
We're still conceptual. In fact I haven't written the design scope of work yet. Could anyone offer any ideas or call out any issues that I'm missing?
thanks,
Ed