Water, Sewage & Effluent September-October 2017 | Page 16

Sensor technology in city infrastructure To withstand the pressure on infrastructure that urbanisation will bring, smart cities are expected to grow commensurate with the process of worldwide urbanisation. By Sivan Cohen Improved water management Installing a network of smart, Internet of Things (IoT)-enabled sensors can greatly improve the efficiency of any water distribution network. A key benefit of smart water networks is reducing non-revenue water, or supply water physically lost as it passes through the system owing to leakages. Advanced sensing technologies, such as analytical techniques that measure water usage within a closed geographical area to assess loss, can provide utilities with real-time visibility on any leaks occurring. Advanced data 14 M ore than 6.5 billion people are expected to live in cities by 2050, according to UN estimates. That figure represents more than double the number of people currently living in such settlements. To withstand the pressure on infrastructure that this process of urbanisation will bring, smart cities — referring to a concept by which cities’ traditionally offline systems such as water supply networks are brought online and connected to sophisticated analysis and control systems — are expected to grow commensurate with this process of worldwide urbanisation. Alongside provisioning special, low- powered telecommunications networks to support their connectivity, sensor technology is the key means for driving the growth of these projects, which are expected to rise fourfold in number by 2025. The following are just some of the ways in which the latest breed of low- power sensors, specifically designed for monitoring city infrastructure, are helping to make the smart city dream a reality. Wastewater management can be improved by using smart networks to connect infrastructure with control and monitoring systems. analytics can add further insights by parsing the raw information from the sensors. According to a World Bank study, 32 billion cubic meters of water are lost annually through such issues which, among other reasons, can often be attributed to poor or ageing infrastructure and theft. Better wastewater management Like water, wastewater management can also be improved by using smart networks to connect infrastructure with control and monitoring systems, such as SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) platforms. Combined sewer overflow and sanitary sewer overflow events occur whenever sewer systems are filled past capacity and are forced to spill contaminated contents from designated overflow sites. Such events can have devastating implications for nearby residents and for the local ecosystem. The more real-time monitoring capabilities a utility has at its disposal Water Sewage & Effluent September/October 2017 (such as data from sensors to measure water quality, pressure, and velocity), the quicker it can react to changing conditions to initiate remedial mechanisms such as manipulating underground gates and valves or activating ancillary treatment sites. Fewer overflows also extends the lifetime of equipment throughout wastewater networks. Better power Although from a consumer’s perspective it may seem hard to distinguish between the electricity supplied from one outlet to the next, this is not the case for industrial users for whom the consistency of voltage, frequency, and waveform can have important ramifications for manufacturing processes and machine life expectancy. Variations in power quality can result from voltage sags, spikes, and swells. Even interruptions lasting only a few milliseconds can damage sensitive equipment. Continuous power-quality