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A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium

Water conveyed through pipes systems installed beneath the ground surface has become standard practice in which treated fresh water is transported to communities. This kind of water delivery is successful in many regards but also results in considerable amounts of water wastage in the form of undete...

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Main Author: Govender, Kuveshan
Other Authors: Van Zyl, Jakobus E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Civil Engineering 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Govender, Kuveshan
author2 Van Zyl, Jakobus E
author_browse Govender, Kuveshan
Van Zyl, Jakobus E
author_facet Van Zyl, Jakobus E
Govender, Kuveshan
author_sort Govender, Kuveshan
collection Thesis
description Water conveyed through pipes systems installed beneath the ground surface has become standard practice in which treated fresh water is transported to communities. This kind of water delivery is successful in many regards but also results in considerable amounts of water wastage in the form of undetectable leakage. This is a serious concern since fresh water reserves throughout the world are being depleted faster than it is replenished; yet, there exists a large gap in understanding how leaks outside water distribution pipes behave. Recent studies that have investigated external leakage behaviour have discovered that when water under pressure passes through a leak opening (orifice); a water jet is formed, which interacts with the surrounding soil (bedding material) in a manner that causes the granular medium to fluidise. This fluidisation process was seen to exhibit complex behaviour, which restricted shallow leaks under relatively high pipe pressures from growing and reaching the bed surface. As a result, leaks are able to remain bound beneath the ground surface with reduced chances of being detected and repaired. The goal of this study was to conduct experiments aimed of performing a sensitivity analysis on how leakage conditions in the bed are affected when soil-leak characteristics including jet flow rate, bed height and the size of the granular particles in the bed are varied. In this study a vertical water jet in an idealised granular bed (glass beads) was used. The leakage conditions that were examined for each soil-leak factor comprised of measuring the height of the fluidised region and distributions of pore pressure, fluid velocity and energy within the bed. The sensitivity analysis was based on data collected from experiments, which were conducted using an apparatus that was able to simulate an unbound pipe leak. The apparatus comprised of a glass tank, which housed the bedding material. An orifice installed at the bottom of the tank assisted in creating the water jet required for the pipe leak and, a Pitot tube positioning system above the tank allowed for positioning of straight and L-type Pitot tubes in the granular bed, which were used to measure the leakage conditions within the bed. Results from the experiments revealed that the soil-leak factors, which were investigated had significantly affected leakage conditions, each to varying degrees. Larger jet flow rates led to an exponential increase in fluidisation height and higher maximum pore pressures, velocities and energies were measured in the bed. It was found that by varying the bed height, fluidisation height increased linearly with decreasing bed height and only the pore pressure distribution was considerably affected, where larger maximum pore pressures were measured in beds that were shallower. The effects of varying particle size included lower fluidisation heights and maximum pore pressures in beds that contained larger particles. Interestingly, the velocity and energy distribution remained substantially unaffected.
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id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24884
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:14.045Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Department of Civil Engineering
publisherStr Department of Civil Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24884 A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium Govender, Kuveshan Van Zyl, Jakobus E Civil Engineering Water conveyed through pipes systems installed beneath the ground surface has become standard practice in which treated fresh water is transported to communities. This kind of water delivery is successful in many regards but also results in considerable amounts of water wastage in the form of undetectable leakage. This is a serious concern since fresh water reserves throughout the world are being depleted faster than it is replenished; yet, there exists a large gap in understanding how leaks outside water distribution pipes behave. Recent studies that have investigated external leakage behaviour have discovered that when water under pressure passes through a leak opening (orifice); a water jet is formed, which interacts with the surrounding soil (bedding material) in a manner that causes the granular medium to fluidise. This fluidisation process was seen to exhibit complex behaviour, which restricted shallow leaks under relatively high pipe pressures from growing and reaching the bed surface. As a result, leaks are able to remain bound beneath the ground surface with reduced chances of being detected and repaired. The goal of this study was to conduct experiments aimed of performing a sensitivity analysis on how leakage conditions in the bed are affected when soil-leak characteristics including jet flow rate, bed height and the size of the granular particles in the bed are varied. In this study a vertical water jet in an idealised granular bed (glass beads) was used. The leakage conditions that were examined for each soil-leak factor comprised of measuring the height of the fluidised region and distributions of pore pressure, fluid velocity and energy within the bed. The sensitivity analysis was based on data collected from experiments, which were conducted using an apparatus that was able to simulate an unbound pipe leak. The apparatus comprised of a glass tank, which housed the bedding material. An orifice installed at the bottom of the tank assisted in creating the water jet required for the pipe leak and, a Pitot tube positioning system above the tank allowed for positioning of straight and L-type Pitot tubes in the granular bed, which were used to measure the leakage conditions within the bed. Results from the experiments revealed that the soil-leak factors, which were investigated had significantly affected leakage conditions, each to varying degrees. Larger jet flow rates led to an exponential increase in fluidisation height and higher maximum pore pressures, velocities and energies were measured in the bed. It was found that by varying the bed height, fluidisation height increased linearly with decreasing bed height and only the pore pressure distribution was considerably affected, where larger maximum pore pressures were measured in beds that were shallower. The effects of varying particle size included lower fluidisation heights and maximum pore pressures in beds that contained larger particles. Interestingly, the velocity and energy distribution remained substantially unaffected. 2017-08-17T14:11:09Z 2017-08-17T14:11:09Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MSc (Eng) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24884 eng application/pdf Department of Civil Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Civil Engineering
Govender, Kuveshan
A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium
title_full A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium
title_fullStr A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium
title_full_unstemmed A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium
title_short A laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium
title_sort laboratory investigation of the effect of flow rate and bedding characteristics on the interaction of a vertical water jet with an idealised soil medium
topic Civil Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24884
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AT govenderkuveshan laboratoryinvestigationoftheeffectofflowrateandbeddingcharacteristicsontheinteractionofaverticalwaterjetwithanidealisedsoilmedium