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Ce 322 Project 1

The document outlines a project to design a standby water supply system for the Civil Engineering department. Key aspects of the design include: 1. Surveying current and projected water usage. 2. Identifying a water source such as an on-campus aquifer. 3. Designing the pumping system including rate, duration and pump selection based on well depth. 4. Designing the storage tank based on 3 days demand capacity and distribution network. 5. Calculating flows in pipes and at taps using an existing network map. 6. Providing overall costing including design, equipment, and implementation costs.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
90 views2 pages

Ce 322 Project 1

The document outlines a project to design a standby water supply system for the Civil Engineering department. Key aspects of the design include: 1. Surveying current and projected water usage. 2. Identifying a water source such as an on-campus aquifer. 3. Designing the pumping system including rate, duration and pump selection based on well depth. 4. Designing the storage tank based on 3 days demand capacity and distribution network. 5. Calculating flows in pipes and at taps using an existing network map. 6. Providing overall costing including design, equipment, and implementation costs.

Uploaded by

Nickson Koms
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CE 322 PROJECT 1

1.0 Project Title

Design of a Stand-by water Supply System for Civil Engineering Department

2.0 Project Description

This is a water supply project that will serve as a backup/standby system that will sustain the
department .You are expected to work in your laboratory groups and submit individual reports at the
end of week 12. Your design should be based on a continuous supply just as Water PNG, and should be
switched off when not needed. The design stages include;

(i) Doing a survey on water usage in the department on a daily basis. This should consider
any developments in the next ten years (Info can be obtained from Mr. Isan).
(ii) Locating a water source (Possible Aquifer (Well) inside the campus perimeter)
(iii) Obtain/establish standing water Level and aquifer recharge rate(using soil permeability
information)
(iv) Consider the height of the aquifer
(v) Design for and select the pumping rate and duration on a daily basis
(vi) Design for and select the Pump
a. Consider the depth of the well
b. Consider the elevation profile from the well location to the storage tank.
(vii) Design rising main pipeline (pipeline from pump to storage tank)
(viii) Design of storage tank/s to cater for demand (size, elevation etc). The storage tank should
be located at the Civil engineering premises.
a. Design tank capacity based on 3 days demand storage capacity.
b. Determine reservoir head and flow rate to meet standard demand duty.

(ix) Design the distribution network system from the storage tank to the Civil engineering
department.
(x) Using the already established pipe network system for the department (Can be obtained
from Mr. Isan), calculate the max and min flow rates in each pipe and at each tap.
(xi) Do overall costing for all testing, design, equipment and implementation costs, with
quotations for equipment and testing.

(Include all design calculations clearly under each labelled design)

Notes: (All friction losses should be calculated for/assumed for, and catered for by the pump).

1. Head and friction loss calculations, use Darcy Friction Loss Formula or other
2. To calculate friction losses using Darcy Friction Loss Formula the following parameters are
required

Given Data
a. Flow Rate (Q)
b. Pipe Inside Diameter (D)
c. Kinematic Viscosity (ν)
d. Specific Roughness (Є)
e. Pipe Length (L)
f. Basic head loss factors for fittings
K
Angle Valve 5
Ball Valve, Full Port 0.05
Butterfly Valve 0.6
Check Valve, Swing Type 2.3
Elbow 45 Degrees 0.4
Elbow 90 Degrees, Long Radius 0.6
Elbow 90 Degrees, Standard 0.9
Flow Meter, Turbine Type 7
Foot Valve 0.9
Gate Valve 0.2
Globe Valve 10
Pipe Entrance, Inward Projected Pipe 1
Pipe Entrance, Sharp Edge 0.5
Pipe Exit 1
Tee, Standard, Flow Through Branch 1.8
Tee, Standard, Flow Through Run 0.6

Calculated Data
a. Average Velocity - V (m/s)
b. Reynolds Number
c. Darcy Friction Factor

3. Typical bore pump layout

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