September-October 2007

Dollars and Sensing

Water provider finds that a fixed network for leak monitoring—and meter reading—makes economic sense for a historic Pennsylvania city’s aging pipe network.

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By Don Talend

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Hughes describes American Water’s previously used method of detecting leaks as reactive. For some leak-prone water networks, considerable manpower would be devoted to conducting leak surveys, and in others, conditions causing leaks would force water to the surface in a short period of time—a truly reactive situation. For less leak-prone networks, leak surveys sometimes would be deemed not worth the cost despite losses of retail water. In some situations, Hughes says, it’s possible to detect abnormalities in network operation; in these situations, conducting leak surveys on an as-needed basis makes economic sense.

“Demand management is where you break your system into smaller pieces,” says Hughes. “Our plan is to use that methodology where we think it’s practical. There are systems where not only can we meter the water but we can also lower the pressure, and, obviously, lowering the pressure also lowers the flow that might escape from the pipe over time. It’s a mixed bag.

Photo: Itron
Some systems’ leak detection programs lower the pipe’s water pressure in addition to metering the water.

“If we had indications that the amount of water that we were metering versus the amount of water that we were pumping had wide variance, that would be sufficient because there are systems where water simply does not come to the surface or takes a very long time to do so—it has to be severe enough to actually percolate to the surface. We have systems with subpressure systems and we might be able to identify which subsystem is actually having the problem—maybe a pump is running much harder than it used to run, for example. One thing we do as a company is look very hard at the non-revenue numbers from place to place. We are very aware of what system is running 20% non-revenue water versus the ones that are reading 10%—that helps us to focus.”

Conducting leak surveys as needed was not an approach that made sense for Connellsville, however. The relatively high incidence of leaks in such an aging underground water network meant that leaks would be common. Hughes and American Water started looking at available fixed-network leak detection technologies. “We found that the acoustic monitoring was getting increasingly sophisticated and companies were getting much better at understanding the dynamics involved, how far the sound traveled, what frequencies to listen for, and also a visual aid—it’s not a huge leap to provide that in a graphical form that could be recorded,” says Hughes.

Photo: Itron
A graphic interpretation of leak detection results

Still, this would be the first use of more or less constant leak monitoring technology via a fixed network. “Originally, the MLOG was designed to be kind of a radio device that would send out data as you drove by,” Hughes says. “But it certainly looked logical to us and to Flow Metrix that if you had a fixed network, if we had the information available every day, it would really give us better insight and we might actually be even better able to respond to leaks and for the high cost of the leaks that we had in Connellsville, we might be able to get out there even faster. With this system, if we had a next-day leak, we would know it because the sound history would reveal that to us.”

Based on good results they had experienced in other communities, Hughes and American Water had also considered using AMR in Connellsville. AMR, coupled with the need for whole-network leak monitoring, made piggybacking leak-detection monitoring onto fixed-network AMR a good fit for Connellsville. American Water contacted several technology providers, and Itron and Hexagram Inc. showed interest in coordinating their efforts to provide combined leak detection and AMR over a fixed network.

Separating Leak and AMR Data
Itron had already envisioned an AMR interfacing capability and created an AMR-compatible protocol for transmission of its leak-monitoring data to a Web server hosted by parent company Itron. The two providers also worked out the number of data transmissions that could occur in a day. In regard to AMR data, “Instead of doing reads probably twice a day, we’re probably doing four reads a day, but that’s sufficient to convey the information that goes from our 500 transmitters to nine collectors that are scattered throughout the Connellsville area,” Hughes says. “The AMR portion of the system has performed very well from the start.”

Photo: Itron
Meter transmission connects data logger units to water meters.

The Hexagram system uses Meter Transmission Units (MTUs) that connect to water meters and Data Collector Units (DCUs), network devices that receive, process, and store meter reading information. The DCUs transmit these data to a central computer for processing. “It provides the meter data and gives us a file that we can input into our billing system on the day we designate,” says Hughes. “The other thing it does is it pulls out the information that Flow Metrix has assembled and put through the transmitter and brings it out into a series of files that can be downloaded into a computer equipped with the Flow Metrix software.” The data collected by the MTUs are “packaged” in such a way as to facilitate the separation of leak-detection and AMR information into distinct files.

“We’re sending one condensed set of information through the AMR system in a small meter-reading-like message,” Lander notes. “Our Web server collects data from all the MLOGs in the world every day and determines whether or not the leak status of each MLOG should be red, yellow, or green” indicating high, moderate, or low probability of a leak.

“Once the Itron main server has made these determinations, then the individual utility users can get the information in one of two ways: They can either come to our Web site and log online and browse the Web site and see results for all of their utility, or they can receive an e-mail or a regular text message that alerts them to new red loggers.

Photo: American Water
One benefit of fixed networks is the availability of data on a daily basis.

“Many of the leaks that MLOG finds are at the beginning of their lives, which is a great time to find them because you don’t lose all of the water over the next few years and you don’t risk all of the liability or damage,” Lander says. “When they’re at the beginning of their life, they might be inaudible and invisible, with no water present during the day because at nighttime, when there’s no flow, the pressure is highest and it may cause the leak to appear. It may cause a crack or a small pinhole in the pipe to open up and admit water, and then when people start using water in the morning, that crack may close and then for all intents and purposes that leak is not findable.”

The method of finding leaks using this fixed network occurs in reverse order of “conventional” leak detection, in which individuals use listening devices to get a general idea of where leaks are located and then deploy correlators to pinpoint the leaks. This fixed-network method allows for the varying behavioral characteristics of small leaks between nighttime, when water pressure is highest and extraneous noise lowest, and daytime, when staff is more typically available to perform leak maintenance. The listening devices provided by Itron calculate numerical values where the higher the value, the closer the device is to the leak along a pipe’s horizontal axis. This technology provides an independent confirmation of the data provided by the fixed network.

Photo: Flow Metrix
Depending on the type of leak present, a monitored pipe can yield different results. For example, leaks may only appear when there is no water flow, when pressure is highest.

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“What the MLOG will do is to record several hundred times a night, looking for the quietest period on the theory that you can’t turn the leak off,” says Lander. “The sound level at the quietest time of the night is the best representation of the sound of any leaks that are present in the area. We measure the frequencies and the quality of the sound and then we turn that information into a message that is sent out through the AMR system. The MLOG sensor only knows what kind of quality of sound is present at the quietest time of the night. It doesn’t know if that is a leak or if that is an ice machine in the basement or if that is a pump station down the road; it doesn’t know those things. This is where MLOG online comes into play; MLOG online will take raw information at the quietest time from every MLOG sensor, and it is the Web software on the PC server that makes a determination of whether the sensor is hearing a leak or something else, or nothing at all.”

A key to ensuring the validity of the fixed network’s leak data is the ability of the Web server to group historical data from different data loggers and determine if a leak is actually present. The data-analysis function of the system demonstrates that computers are superior to humans for the purposes of making a high volume of mathematical calculations very quickly. Next Page >

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