Graph Laplace Regularization-based pressure sensor placement strategy for leak localization in the water distribution networks under joint hydraulic and topological feature spaces.

Water Res

School of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, 611731 Chengdu, China; Faculty of Information Technology, University of Jyväskylä, P. O. Box 35, FIN-40014 Jyväskylä, Finland.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Urban water distribution networks (WDNs) have problems like leaks and pipe bursts, making it important to monitor them effectively.
  • Recently, researchers are using new technology called the Internet of Things (IoT) and wireless sensors to keep track of these networks.
  • The study suggests a new way to decide where to place sensors by looking at both how the water flows and how the network is connected, and tests show it works better than some old methods.

Article Abstract

Urban water distribution networks (WDNs) have wide range and intricate topology, which include leakage, pipe burst and other abnormal states during production and operation. With the continuous development of the Internet of Things (IoT) technology in recent years, the means of monitoring the WDNs by using wireless sensor network technology has gradually received attention and extensive research. Most of the existing researches select the deployment location of sensors according to the hydraulic state of the WDNs, but the connectivity and topology between the nodes of the WDNs are not fully considered and analyzed. In this study, a new method that can integrate the topological features and hydraulic model information of the WDN is proposed to solve the problem of optimal sensor placement. First, the method preprocesses the covariance matrix of the pressure sensitivity matrix of the water distribution network by a diffusion kernel-based data prefiltering method and obtains the new network topology weights and its Laplacian matrix under the constraints of the network topology through a data-based graphical Laplacian learning method. Then, the sensor placement problem is transformed into a matrix minimum eigenvalue constraint problem by the Graph Laplace Regularization (GLR)-based method, and finally the selection of sensor nodes is accomplished by the method based on Gershgorin Disc Alignment (GDA). The proposed strategy is tested on a passive Hanoi network, an active Net 3 network, and a larger network, PA2, and is compared with some existing methods. The results show that the proposed solution achieves good performance in three different leak localization methods.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2024.121666DOI Listing

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