Community-Scale Rural Drinking Water Supply Systems Based on Harvested Rainwater: A Case Study of Australia and Vietnam
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Study Areas and Data Selection
3.2. Design of Community-Scale Drinking Water Supply System Based on Harvested Rainwater
- a.
- Rainwater collection apparatus
- b.
- Rainwater storage tank
- c.
- Multi-step rainwater treatment system
- d.
- Storage tank to hold daily produced drinking water
- e.
- Solar energy system and water pumps
3.3. Water Balance and Economic Analysis
3.3.1. Reliability Analysis
- Rural community sizes: due to different population sizes and densities between Australia and Vietnam, five scenarios of rural community with 50, 100, 150, 200 and 250 households were considered in the model.
- Household sizes: Vietnamese scenarios are based on household size of four people, rounded up from the average rural household size of 3.9 in the statistic of Vietnam Population and Housing Census survey [74]. However, three occupants per household is considered in Australian scenarios because households in Australia are getting smaller; the average number of people per household fell from 4.5 to 2.6 during 1911–2016 [75].
- Daily drinking water usage: In order to follow the UN requirements regarding the right to water, we selected drinking water demand in rural areas in the range of 20–50 L/capita/day (LCD). This range of drinking water demand for a person in a day can be sufficient for a range of activities (such as 10 L for drinking, 20 L for drinking and cooking, 30 L for drinking, cooking and personal washing, 40 L for drinking, cooking, personal washing and cloth washing, and 50 L for drinking, cooking, personal washing, cloth washing and cleaning home [76,77,78]). The study analysed multiple scenarios with 5 LCD intervals within the range of drinking water demand (i.e., 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45 and 50 LCD). As the study considered the rural areas with limited/no access to mains water supply, the analysis was performed to understand whether an RWH system could meet the drinking water demand for a rural community in the lowest expectation of emergencies and/or in the highest expectation of sustainable developments.
- Rainwater tank size: a wide range of tank sizes from 25–1600 kL was tested in the model to evaluate trends of reliability and the capacity of water supplied by the proposed RWH system.
- The runoff coefficient (C) is a dimensionless coefficient relating the amount of runoff to the amount of precipitation received. It depends on roof gradient and gutter characteristics. It is recommended that the C value for the roof is 0.75–0.95. The designers must determine the most appropriate C value within this range [79]; here we selected a typical value of 0.85.
- According to the guidance on the use of rainwater tanks by the Australian Government Department of Health, the average roof area can range from 100–150 m2 for a small house, 150–200 m2 for a medium house and greater than 200 m2 for a large house [80]. In this study, the average roof area for a medium house in the rural community is considered at 200 m2.
- First flush is the initial surface runoff from a rainfall event. There is considerable literature dedicated to the study of first flush phenomena. The classic study by Yaziz et al. (1989), with a number of experiments based on fixed volumes, described a rule-of-thumb of diverting 5 L of first flush [81]. Other publications have recommended first flush should be between 1–2 gallons per 100 square feet of roofing or 20–25 L for an average-sized roof [82]. Studies on quantifying the first flush phenomenon reported that for each 1 mm of first flush the contaminate load will halve. It is possible to remove up to 85% of incoming pollution material while retaining 85% of the roof harvested rainwater if the first flush device is designed carefully [83,84]. Moreover, other research showed that bypassing the first 2 mm of rainfall gives harvested rainwater the most quality parameters compliant with the Australian Drinking Water Guidelines [85]. In this study, it is assumed that the rural community can apply well-designed first flush devices, and the first 1 mm of rainfall in a rain event can be the robust average first flush loss value that was applied in the MATLAB model.
- Finally, modelling outputs for the proposed RWH system were calculated as follows.
- Number of consumers = number of houses x number of occupants per household.
- Water demand (WD) = number of consumers x daily drinking water usage per person.
- Runoff, effective runoff, overflow, water demand, water supply and track changes in storage volume from the rainwater tank can be simulated on a daily time step by the YAS algorithm (Equations (1)–(7)).
3.3.2. Life Cycle Cost Analysis (LCCA)
4. Results
4.1. Reliability
4.2. ADWP
4.3. BCR
4.4. Sensitivity Analysis for the Produced Water Price
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Countries | Rainfall Stations | Rainfall Record Periods | Annual Rainfall (mm) | Annual Rainy Days | Annual Rainfall (mm) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | Bilpin | 1960–2019 | 1303 | 133 | |
Richmond | 1960–2019 | 821 | 119 | 1059 | |
Springwood | 1960–2019 | 1055 | 108 | ||
Vietnam | TDM | 1977–2019 | 1891 | 151 | |
NB | 1980–2019 | 1685 | 140 | 1844 | |
TSH | 1980–2019 | 1955 | 159 |
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Ross, T.T.; Alim, M.A.; Rahman, A. Community-Scale Rural Drinking Water Supply Systems Based on Harvested Rainwater: A Case Study of Australia and Vietnam. Water 2022, 14, 1763. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14111763
Ross TT, Alim MA, Rahman A. Community-Scale Rural Drinking Water Supply Systems Based on Harvested Rainwater: A Case Study of Australia and Vietnam. Water. 2022; 14(11):1763. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14111763
Chicago/Turabian StyleRoss, Tara T., Mohammad A. Alim, and Ataur Rahman. 2022. "Community-Scale Rural Drinking Water Supply Systems Based on Harvested Rainwater: A Case Study of Australia and Vietnam" Water 14, no. 11: 1763. https://doi.org/10.3390/w14111763