| Literature DB >> 34506787 |
Hanting Wu1, Yangrui Huang2, Lei Chen3, Yingjie Zhu4, Huaizheng Li5.
Abstract
Overflow pollution is an undesired issue that commonly occurs in combined sewers under wet weather conditions. There is a lack of existing studies on the structural optimization of sewers to prevent siltation, and no previous study on egg-shaped sewers with this purpose has confirmed satisfactory anti-sedimentation performance. To achieve reduced sedimentation and lower energy loss under low- and high-flow conditions, respectively, the nondominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) was adopted in this study based on a constant full filling discharge capacity equal to that of a 300 mm (diameter) circular sewer. The results showed that egg-shaped sewers with bottom and top arc radii of 58.3 and 116.6 mm, respectively, and a height of 408.1 mm performed significantly better than circular sewers (d = 300 mm). Notably, at a low flow ratio below 0.2, the shear stress of the optimized egg-shaped sewer was 5.2%-20.6% higher than that of the circular sewer. At a flow ratio of 0.2-0.6, both the egg-shaped and circular sewers were capable of maintaining a balanced amount of sediment between deposition and erosion. As the flow ratio increased to 0.6-1, both types of sewers completely scoured sediments: in this situation, the shear stress of the egg-shaped sewer was 5.5%-10.1% lower than that of the circular sewer, thus exhibiting reduced energy loss. This study indicates that egg-shaped sewers have an attractive future in replacing circular sewers for sedimentation prevention and cost control.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-sedimentation; Egg-shaped sewer; Nondominated sorting genetic algorithm; Shear stress; Structural design optimization
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34506787 DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.111999
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Res ISSN: 0013-9351 Impact factor: 6.498