City of Morgan Hill Water System Master Plan 2017

2017 City of Morgan Hill

6.0

CHAPTER 6 - HYDRAULIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT

This chapter describes the development and calibration of the City’s domestic water distribution system hydraulic model. The hydraulic model was used to evaluate the capacity adequacy of the existing system and to plan its expansion to service anticipated future growth.

6.1 OVERVIEW

Hydraulic network analysis has become an effectively powerful tool in many aspects of water distribution planning, design, operation, management, emergency response planning, system reliability analysis, fire flow analysis, and water quality evaluations. The City’s hydraulic model was used to evaluate the capacity adequacy of the existing system and to plan its expansion to service anticipated future growth.

6.2 MODEL SELECTION

The City’s hydraulic model combines information on the physical characteristics of the water system (pipelines, groundwater wells, and storage reservoir) and operational characteristics (how they operate). The hydraulic model then performs calculations and solves series of equations to simulate flows in pipes and calculate pressures at nodes or junctions. There are several network analysis software products that are released by different manufacturers, which can equally perform the hydraulic analysis satisfactorily. The selection of software depends on user preferences, the distribution system’s unique requirements, and the costs for purchasing and maintaining the software. The City’s previous model was developed using Innovyze’s (previously MWHSoft) H20Net, which runs inside AutoCAD and uses the effective EPANET hydraulic engine for processing the hydraulic calculations. As part of this master plan, the hydraulic model has been updated and redeveloped into the GIS-based hydraulic model InfoWater by Innovyze. The model has an intuitive graphical interface and is directly integrated with ESRI’s ArcGIS (GIS).

6.3 HYDRAULIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT

Developing the hydraulic model included skeletonization, digitizing and quality control, developing pipe and node databases, and water demand allocation.

6.3.1

Skeletonization

Skeletonizing the model refers to the process where pipes not essential to the hydraulic analysis of the system are stripped from the model. Skeletonizing the model is useful in creating a system that accurately reflects the hydraulics of the pipes within the system, while reducing complexities

June 2017

6-1

City of Morgan Hill Water System Master Plan

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker