SSA Diurnal Wastewater Hydrograph

Anonymous

SSA Diurnal Wastewater Hydrograph

Anonymous
Not applicable

Where does the diurnal hydrograph for typical residential wastewater flows in SSA come from? I see it used often but I can't find any scientific journals justifying how it is created. I understand the logic behind it, but am looking for the specific journal citation to justify its use.  Thanks for your help. 

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Anonymous
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Bump

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wfberry
Mentor
Mentor

Here is a link to a journal report.  Since my knowledge of a Diurnal Hydrograph is limited to just what I learned today, I hardly see any connection to your attached hydrograph.

 

Bill

http://snr.unl.edu/szilagyi/jh10.pdf

 

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Anonymous
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Thank you for your response. The diurnal hydrograph I am refering to is specifically for estimated wastewater flows for development. Not for stormwater/groundwater as your journal article linked.  

 

SSA has a "default" sanitary time pattern that is in their models, modeling the AM and PM peaks of a normal wastewater system (caused from workers waking up in AM and chores in PM). I've seen this same pattern all over, but I want to know how it is derived or justified. See my clipped image from one of SSA's own sample models using this hydrograph pattern for WW inflows. 

 

Thanks

nate.philbrick
Autodesk Support
Autodesk Support
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Hi @Anonymous , 

 

Thank you for reaching out in the Autodesk forums. This is a great platform where you and the rest of the Autodesk community can benefit. This is a generic hydrograph making estimated peaking factors in the morning and evening for residental wastewater flow. There is not a specific study where this has been derived from. You can adjust your inputs for higher accuracy. For sanitary sewer design, I have always computed the average daily flow and multiplied by a peaking factor (and then add any additional flows for I&I). 

 

Please hit accept solution if this answers your question. 



Nate Philbrick

Technical Support Specialist Civil 3D & Infraworks

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thanks for your response Nate. I also usually size WW lines to the hourly peak which is a multiple of the daily peak calculated from the local municipality's design manual (plus I&I). In this situation though we are hoping to utilize this information to design a private WW equalization tank for a development to discharge into an overloaded city system during non-peak times. This requires the entire hydrograph for the system (and not just the peak) so we can properly design detention volumes. I will accept your answer, but it's a little disheartening to hear that the "generic" hydrograph doesn't have a justification to it. I don't fault Autodesk as it seems that everyone is using a similar graph, but as engineers we like to think that everything that we do has a basis behind it. 

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