water meters
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2022 ◽  
Vol 1212 (1) ◽  
pp. 012042
Author(s):  
A Amir ◽  
R Fauzi ◽  
Y Arifin

Abstract Clean water is one of the main sectors in smart city that need well management. One of the clean water management is utilization of water meters. The smart meter is more suitable applied for smart city. Recent Smart Water Meter allows water authorities to obtain water consumption data remotely. It also provides ability to collect and record the data in real time that can be utilised for multipurpose. However, in Indonesia, the water meters are used only to measure the total volume of clean water consumption for billing purpose only using mechanical water meter and requires labour intensive manual. Currently, many researches on smart meter design have been developed. However, the smart meter only measure and record the water consumption, without ability in which customer can determine the amount of water as needed. This paper describes design and development of smart water metering with Internet of Things. Flow meter is used as a sensor of water flowing through the pipe. The ability of the proposed smart meter is not only to measure and to record the volume water consumed, but also the customer can determine the water desired and required. The volume of water measured by the smart meter is compared with the manual measurement. The result shows that the water measured manually differs slightly from smart meter measurement using water flow sensor. The maximum difference, error, is 0.03 litres. The proposed smart meter has ability to close the main valve once the determined amount of water is reached.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 100137
Author(s):  
Jieqiang Ji ◽  
Jianying Zheng ◽  
GuoFu Chen ◽  
Xiaojie Wu ◽  
NingNing Zhang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kamilla Zhalmurziyeva ◽  
Serik Tokbolat ◽  
Serdar Durdyev ◽  
Mohamad Y. Mustafa ◽  
Ferhat Karaca

PurposeThis research aims to study a broad range of sustainability aspects and develop a set of indicators with their subjective relevance to each of the sustainability dimensions that will help to improve the sustainability level of the water system of Nur-Sultan (Kazakhstan).Design/methodology/approachThe broader list of indicators (which were identified through a thorough review of the literature) was assessed by water-related industry professionals and experts who were asked to assess the compliance of suggested indicators to five criteria of sustainability using a Likert scale.FindingsIt was found that the highest-ranked indicators across all five categories were mainly related to the chemical and physical quality of water, followed by availability of individual water meters as well as water supply tariffs' adjustment to users' income, and issues of ageing infrastructure. The lowest-ranked indicators among all categories were mainly related to investments into research and development, water management and awareness, feedback systems and flexibility. The least ranked indicators are seen to be more related to the scenarios when basic needs are covered and the stakeholders have extra time and resources for advancing the levels of water infrastructure sustainability.Practical implicationsThe ranked and categorized indicators can be used as a powerful decision-making tool to improve the sustainability of the water system of Nur-Sultan or any other city in a developing country.Originality/valueBy conducting this study, it was aimed to address the aforementioned gap in the field in terms of running a wider scope assessment of indicators rather than looking at conventional environmental and socio-economic aspects. This provides novelty to the study, especially in the context of developing countries that need more guidance in terms of sustainable development of the water-related infrastructure.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel Cardell-Oliver ◽  
Harrison Carter-Turner

Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (21) ◽  
pp. 7251
Author(s):  
Marco Carratù ◽  
Salvatore Dello Iacono ◽  
Giuseppe Di Leo ◽  
Consolatina Liguori ◽  
Antonio Pietrosanto

Discovering very small water leaks at the household level is one of the most challenging goals of smart metering. While many solutions for sudden leakage detection have been proposed to date, the small leaks are still giving researchers a hard time. Even if some devices can be found on the market, their capability to detect a water leakage barely reaches the sensitivity of the employed mechanical water meter, which was not designed for detecting small water leakages. This paper proposes a technique for improving the sensitivity of the mechanical register water meters. By implementing this technique in a suitable electronic add-on device, the improved sensitivity could detect very small leaks. This add-on device continuously acquires the mechanical register’s digital images and, thanks to suitable image processing techniques and metrics, allows very small flows to be detected even if lower than the meter starting flow rate. Experimental tests were performed on two types of mechanical water meters, multijet and piston, whose starting flow rates are 8 L/h and 1 L/h, respectively. Results were very interesting in the leakage range of [1.0, 10.0] L/h for the multijet and even in the range [0.25, 1.00] L/h for the piston meter.


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (19) ◽  
pp. 2701
Author(s):  
Oliver Büker ◽  
Krister Stolt ◽  
Corinna Kroner ◽  
Miroslava Benkova ◽  
Jan Pavlas ◽  
...  

In the framework of the ongoing EMPIR Joint Research Project (JRP) 17IND13 Metrology for real-world domestic water metering (Metrowamet), a main task is to investigate the influence of realistic operation conditions, that is, typical water qualities (suspended particles, degree of hardness, and pH value), on the measurement accuracy. For this purpose, two representative types of cold water meters were investigated in more detail. Initially, the cold water meters were calibrated and then subjected to an accelerated wear test with water of different pH values and degrees of hardness. The accelerated wear tests were designed to reproduce the realistic use and service life of a cold water meter. Subsequently, the cold water meters were re-calibrated to assess the influence of the different water qualities on the measurement accuracy. One of the results was that the measurement accuracy of the water meters investigated was not strongly affected by the water quality. The practical realisation and the measurement results are reported in this paper.


Author(s):  
Maria F. Reyes

The island of Santa Cruz, located in the Galápagos Archipelago has experienced a significant increase in tourism with consequent growth of the local population over the past two decades. The rapid increase in the number of hotels and restaurants raised pressure on the water demand needed to satisfy the customers’ needs. The municipality of Santa Cruz has not been capable of coping with current expansion rates in order to provide good quality water services. Financial constraints, limited personnel, and tariff structures are the main reasons that restrict the capacity of the Department of Potable Water and Sanitation (DPWS) to manage the water supply system. There are two main settlements on the island are Puerto Ayora and its suburb, Bellavista, with a total population of approximately 14,500 and independent water supply systems. Puerto Ayora has a fixed-priced tariff per month, for categories established by the municipality. On the other hand, Bellavista has a metered system, with fixed consumer costs Yet, approximately 32% of water meters are faulty. Consequently, water demand in these two settlements varies significantly, which is likely influenced by the difference in tariff structures. This manuscript assesses the difference in tariffs between the two settlements. Furthermore, the impacts on revenues due to faulty meters (Bellavista) and fixed tariffs (Puerto Ayora) are quantified. In addition, several scenarios have been developed and analyzed in order to examine the benefits. Finally, the information regarding overdue bills and willingness to pay by the different categories of users has been examined. Results show that the revenues from water supply vary extensively between the two settlements. Due to the fixed tariffs in Puerto Ayora, the estimated cost per cubic meter of water varies depending on the specific category and estimated quantities of water used. In the case of Bellavista, water meters should be managed better and have regular maintenance. The high percentage of faulty meters gives an extra deficit to the municipality.


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (18) ◽  
pp. 2474
Author(s):  
Lucas Lepinski Golin Freitas ◽  
Andreza Kalbusch ◽  
Elisa Henning ◽  
Olga Maria Formigoni Carvalho Walter

This manuscript proposes the usage of Statistical Control Charts (SCC) to monitor water consumption in buildings. The charts were employed to study the impact of replacing toilets, providing visual and statistical feedback to measure the efficiency gain resulting from the replacement of outdated flushing equipment with newer devices. The case study was conducted in a building from a university in the South of Brazil. The building has four restrooms, from which a total of 41,554 readings were collected during a 15-month period using digital water meters. After the toilets were replaced, a reduction averaging 30.22% in water consumption was observed (from 7.51 L/flush/day to 5.24 L/flush/day). Additionally, the control charts were able to pinpoint dates when unique events happened during the water-consumption monitoring process.


2021 ◽  
Vol 293 ◽  
pp. 112846
Author(s):  
Ian Monks ◽  
Rodney A. Stewart ◽  
Oz Sahin ◽  
Robert J. Keller
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