
Journal of Water Supply: Research and TechnologyAQUA Vol 58 No 6 pp 433442 © IWA Publishing 2009 doi:10.2166/aqua.2009.025
Using a tracer to identify water supply zones in a distribution network
Andréanne Simard, Geneviève Pelletier and Manuel J. Rodriguez
BPR, 4655 boulevard Wilfrid-Hamel, Quebec City Quebec, G1P 2J7, Canada
Department of Civil Engineering, Université Laval, Pavillon Adrien-Pouliot, local 2986, 1065 avenue de la Médecine, Quebec City Quebec, G1V 0A6, Canada Tel.: +1 418 656 2647 Fax: +1 418 656 2928 E-mail: genevieve.pelletier@gci.ulaval.ca
École supérieure d'aménagement du territoire et développement régional (ESAD), Université Laval, Pavillon Félix-Antoine-Savard, local 1624, 2325 rue des Bibliothèques, Quebec City Quebec, G1V 0A6, Canada
ABSTRACT
This paper presents a methodology that can effectively identify contributions of water sources to end-use water consumption in distribution network locations. The sector selected for the study is a residential sector of Quebec City supplied with drinking water directly from the main supply pipes from the water treatment plant and by re-chlorinated water from a reservoir. The proposed methodology relies on three strategies: a hydraulic characterization of the distribution network, a tracer study and a water quality characterization study. A tracer study was conducted by injecting CaCl2 brine at the reservoir outlet in order to increase calcium concentrations in water from that source. It was then possible to associate sampling points at which calcium concentrations showed an increase during the test as being supplied by the reservoir. A water quality characterization study was conducted simultaneously with the tracer study, making it possible to validate the distribution zones identified. This validation was made possible by analysing the difference between residual chlorine values from the two sources; in fact, water from the reservoir had distinctively higher levels due to re-chlorination. With this fact, it was possible to identify distribution zones at points where the calcium concentration had remained constant during the tracer test.
Keywords: tracer study; water distribution system; water quality; water supply zones
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