Overview
of
BRANCH
and
EPANET
Tools
for
design
and
analysis
of
piped
water
supply
networks
CTARA
2014
September
Rural
piped
water
supply
schemes
Good
design
is
criAcal
What
is
good
design?
Village/habitaAon(s)
evenly
and
adequately
covered
Minimum
pressure
head
of
5-8
m
at
demand
nodes
Minimized
piping
and
pumping
energy
costs
Feasible
operaAon
(e.g.
pumping
hours
chosen
based
on
load
shedding
paQern)
BRANCH
and
EPANET
are
tools
to
help
reach
a
good
(enough)
design
BRANCH
input/output
For
ElevaAon
DESIGN
output:
every
node
Demand
Lowest
pipe
diameters
Cost
per
pipe
and
total
Pipe
Length
piping
cost
For
every
Pipe
roughness
pipe
BRANCH
ExisAng/Planned
SIMULATION
output:
Network
layout
Source
HGL
Flow
in
each
pipe
Pressure
at
each
node
Min.
residual
pressure
For
the
Head-loss
in
each
pipe
network
Diameter
opAons
Units
(SI
or
Imperial)
Head
loss
formula
EPANET
input/output
For
ElevaAon
every
node
Demand
For
Pipe
length
every
SIMULATION
output:
pipe
Pipe
roughness
EPANET
Pressure
at
each
node
Network
layout
Velocity
in
the
pipe
Head-loss
in
each
pipe
Source
details
and
scheduling
Extended
>me
For
the
Details
of
pumps
and
simula>on
network
valves
Pipe
roughness
Units
(SI
or
Imperial)
Head
loss
formula
BRANCH
vs.
EPANET
Note:
Network
layout
required
for
both.
In
general
Use
BRANCH
for
design:
it
opAmizes
pipe
diameters
(but
only
if
the
network
is
branched
and
gravity-fed)
Use
EPANET
for
simulaAon
if
the
system
has
pumps,
valves,
loops,
and
Ame-variaAons
in
demand
or
supply
Example
network
layout
Junc>on
Elev
-
105
m
1
Pipe
#
1
Pipe
#
2
4
Demand
Node
2
L
1000
m
L
300
m
Elev
-
107
m
Village
Pop.
1200
ESR
Elev
--
110
Pipe
#
3
HGL
120
m
L
400
m
3
Demand
Node
Elev
-
103
m
Village
Pop.
600
Demand
calculaAon
Rural
supply
norm:
55
lpcd
Assume
the
source
is
an
ESR
which
will
supply
the
full
days
water
in
6
hours
Demand
(lps)
=
pop.*55
lpcd/(6
hr
*
3600
s/hr)
Node
3
=>
600
*
55/(6*3600)
=
1.5
lps
Node
4
=>
1200
*
55/(6*3600)
=
3.0
lps
BRANCH
input
-
1
Pipe
data
Node
data
BRANCH
input
-
2
Source
HGL
Hydraulic
grade
line
(e.g.
eleva>on
+
staging
height
of
ESR
=
110+10
=
120)
Pipe
diameter
op>ons
and
cost
per
meter
(taken
from
Maharashtra
Jeevan
Pradhikarans
Schedule
of
Rates,
accessible
online)
HGL
vs.
Total
pipe
cost
and
Pipe
1
diameter
1000
900
140/180
mm
800
700
600
Total
Pipe
Cost
125
mm
(
x
Rs.
1000
)
500
400
300
110
mm
110
mm
200
100
0
112
114
116
118
120
122
124
126
HGL
of
source
(m)
Increasing
the
source
HGL
can
(some>mes)
reduce
total
piping
cost
ElevaAon
vs
Pressure
head
at
Node
3
14
12
10
Residual
8
Pressure
head
at
Node
3
(m)
6
4
0
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
Eleva>on
at
Node
3
(m)
If
the
minimum
pressure
head
is
not
being
met
at
a
point,
one
solu>on
would
be
to
move
that
node
to
a
lower
eleva>on
point
EPANET
What
does
EPANET
do?
Public
domain
sohware
for
simulaAon
of
water
distribuAon
networks
EPANET
analyses
the
ow
of
water
in
each
pipe,
the
pressure
at
each
node,
the
height
of
water
in
a
network.
Advantages:
1. Extended
period
hydraulic
analysis
for
any
system
size.
2. SimulaAon
of
varying
water
demand,
constant
or
variable
speed
pumps,
and
the
minor
head
losses
for
bends
and
kngs.
3. EPANET
can
compute
the
energy
consumpAon
and
cost
of
a
pump.
4. Can
model
various
valve
types
-
pressure
regulaAng,
and
ow
control
valves
5. Provides
a
good
visual
depicAon
of
the
hydraulic
network
6. Data
can
but
imported
in
several
ways
the
network
can
be
drawn
and
data
can
be
imported
from
Google
Earth.
7. Water
quality-SimulaAon
of
chlorine
concentraAon
in
each
pipe
and
at
each
node.
EPANET
slide
1
(
set
up)
Pipe
1
Node
2
Pipe
2
Node
4
Source
Reservoir
Pipe
3
Node
3
EPANET
Output
le-
Nodes
EPANET
Output
le-
Pipes
Extended
period
analysis
EPANET
Time
PaQern:
To
make
our
network
more
realisAc
for
analyzing
an
extended
period
of
operaAon
we
will
create
a
Time
PaQern
that
makes
demands
at
the
nodes
vary
in
a
periodic
way
over
the
course
of
a
day.
The
variability
in
demands
can
be
addressed
through
mulApliers
of
the
Base
Demand
at
each
node.
Nodal
demands,
reservoir
heads,
pump
schedules
can
all
have
Ame
paQerns
associated
with
them.
As
an
example
of
how
Ame
paQerns
work
consider
a
juncAon
node
with
an
average
demand
of
3
lps.
Assume
that
the
Ame
paQern
interval
has
been
set
to
4
hours
and
a
paQern
with
the
following
mulApliers
has
been
specied
for
demand
at
this
node-
Time
Period
1
2
3
4
5
6
Mul>plier
0.5
0.8
1.0
1.2
0.9
0.7
Then
during
the
simulaAon
the
actual
demand
exerted
at
this
node
will
be
as
follows:
Hours
0-4
4-8
8-12
12-16
16-20
20-24
Demand
1.5
2.4
3.0
3.6
2.7
2.1
Manual
Contents
InstallaAon
GIS
BRANCH
EPANET
References
and
exercise