| Literature DB >> 33144852 |
Ankit Anilkumar Maroli1, Vaibhav S Narwane1, Rakesh D Raut2, Balkrishna E Narkhede3.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: This study aims to identify issues plaguing rural India's water supply chain and present a general methodology for the implementation of an IoT-based water distribution and management system in a rural setting. Through the literature review, significant hurdles in the water supply chain of rural India, as well as the potential role of IoT in water supply chain management, were recognized. An implementation plan was proposed to design an IoT-based water distribution and management system with the help of flow meters, ultrasonic sensors, motors, etc. Also, the feasibility of such a system was explored with the help of a use case. This study highlighted that one of the most significant reasons for water scarcity in rural India is the lack of proper infrastructure leading to water resources mismanagement. In the context of our use case, despite adequate availability of physical water for consumption, by the time water is delivered to the consumers, a significant amount of it is wasted due to the lack of an efficient water management system. It was determined that the investment return for the proposed system would break even within three months of installment. This study's results are based on inputs from governmental data collected in the Census report of 2011. As such, the ground level scenario is bound to be comparatively different today. This study is anticipated to guide governmental organizations and policymakers in the formulation of new strategies. © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Internet of Things; Return on investment; Sensors; Water losses; Water management; Water supply chain
Year: 2020 PMID: 33144852 PMCID: PMC7594979 DOI: 10.1007/s10098-020-01975-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clean Technol Environ Policy ISSN: 1618-954X Impact factor: 3.636
Fig. 1Proposed methodology.
Source Author
Fig. 2Satellite view of Chilka.
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Fig. 3General outline of water management and distribution system.
Source Author
Research studies from industrialized economies
| Sr. no. | Publications | Country | Tools and techniques used | Type of paper |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gubbi et al. ( | Australia | IoT, Cloud computing, Ubiquitous sensing, RFID, Smart environments, Wireless sensor networks | Literature review |
| 2 | Lloret et al. ( | Spain | Smart metering, Network architecture, IoT, Big Data | Case study implementation |
| 3 | Wong and Kerkez ( | USA | Sensor networks, On-demand web services, IoT, Adaptive sampling | Case study implementation |
| 4 | Kang et al. ( | South Korea | Neural networks, Support vector machines, Graph-based localization algorithm, Leakage detection methods | Case study implementation |
| 5 | Ismail et al. ( | Malaysia | IoT, Leakage detection techniques, Sensors | Theoretical study |
| 6 | Maamar et al. ( | United Arab Emirates | Cognitive computing; IoT; Sensors | Case Study Implementation |
| 7 | Nie et al. ( | China | Water management systems, Big Data Analytics, Wireless sensor networks, IoT, Sensors | Case study implementation |
Research studies from developing economies
| Sr. no. | Publications | Country | Tools and techniques used | Type of paper |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cloete et al. ( | South Africa | Water quality monitoring, conductivity sensor, ORP sensor, flow sensor, temperature sensor, ZigBee, pH sensor, Wireless Sensor Networks | Case study implementation |
| 2 | Farooq et al. ( | Pakistan | IoT, WSN, RFID, | Theoretical study |
| 3 | Pandey and Sharma ( | India | Community-based natural resource management (CBNRM), Water Resource Management, Water Shortage Issue | Case study implementation |
| 4 | Adedeji et al. ( | South Africa | Leakage detection, water distribution network, wireless sensor network | Theoretical study |
| 5 | Daadoo and Daraghmi ( | Palestine | Arduino, GSM Module, Leakage detection system, WSN | Case study implementation |
| 6 | Geetha and Gouthami ( | India | IoT, Wi-Fi, Cloud storage, Sensor networks | Case study implementation |
| 7 | Parameswari and Moses ( | India | IoT, Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), Arduino Uno, GPRS | Case study implementation |
| 8 | Shivpuje et al. ( | India | Water Resource Management, Water Shortage Issue | Case study implementation |
| 9 | Saravanan et al. ( | India | Sensors, GSM module, IoT, Leakage detection, Arduino Atmega 368, SCADA, Real-time water quality monitoring system | Case study implementation |
| 10 | El-Zahab and Zayed ( | Lebanon | Leak detection technologies, IoT, Web of Knowledge (WoK) | Theoretical study |
| 11 | Kawarkhe and Agrawal ( | India | Temperature Sensor, pH Sensors, Ultrasonic Sensor, Flow Sensor, Microcontroller | Case study implementation |
| 12 | Morais et al. ( | Brazil | IoT, Data analysis, Survey, Sensors | Literature review |
| 13 | Odiagbe et al. ( | Nigeria | IoT, Solenoid valves, Water Management System, Sensors, Cloud computer | Case study implementation |
Bill of materials
| Sr. no | Item | Price per part (Rs.) | Quantity | Total (Rs.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Water tanker (10,000 L) | 80,500 | 4 | 3,22,000 |
| 2 | Water tanker (5000 L) | 37,500 | 8 | 3,00,000 |
| 3 | Pressure sensors | 9500 | 12 | 1,14,000 |
| 4 | Flowmeter | 9500 | 12 | 1,14,000 |
| 5 | Ultrasonic water level sensor | 7000 | 12 | 84,000 |
| 6 | Motor pumps | 5000 | 25 | 1,25,000 |
| 7 | Solid-state relays | 500 | 12 | 6000 |
| 8 | Electronic valves | 500 | 12 | 6000 |
| 9 | Miscellaneous | 5000 | ||
| Total expenditure | 10,76,000 |