Science Inventory

Optimization of Wastewater Lift Stations for Reduction of Energy Usage and Greenhouse Gas Emissions (WERF Report INFR3R11)

Citation:

Wilcoxson, D. AND M. Badruzzaman. Optimization of Wastewater Lift Stations for Reduction of Energy Usage and Greenhouse Gas Emissions (WERF Report INFR3R11). Water Environment Research Foundation, Alexandria, VA, 2013.

Impact/Purpose:

This project and report introduces capabilities of new generation hydraulic models and supervisory control and data acquisition systems. The use of hydraulic modeling to identify energy efficient operating conditions is demonstrated. The project illustrates the integration of hydraulic modeling into the development of optimal control strategies for lift stations. The report provides guidance on improving energy efficiency and reducing greenhouse gas emissions of wastewater lift stations.

Description:

One of the major contributions of Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions from water resource recovery facilities results from the energy used by the pumping regime of the lift stations. This project demonstrated an energy-efficient control method of lift station system operation that utilizes hydraulic modeling results generated from site-specific conditions to optimize the pumping units and reduce simultaneous running cycles. The new control system, which features new generation Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) configurations, allows data communication directly from each lift station to the wastewater central control room. This configuration eliminates slow, conventional two-way communication via aging radio, telephone, and hardwired copper networks that require data to pass through data concentrators located miles away from the central control room. This new method of operation reduced operating pressures in the common force main, reduced the energy demands of the pumping units, and stabilized the influent flow into the wastewater treatment facility. Pilot tests conducted in this study demonstrated that the energy savings obtained through such operational optimization is approximately 15%. A set of guidelines developed in this study detail how lift stations can be optimized using advanced hydraulic modeling and new generation SCADA systems. The findings of this study should allow wastewater facilities to: • Reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the wastewater facility. • Reduce force main operating pressures, total dynamic head and power consumption. • Reduce facility operating cost by designing system capacity based on optimized system operations. • Schedule motor and pump operating cycles to increase service life and reduce service calls. [NOTE: The link below connects to a WERF site where the Final Report can be downloaded for free, after registering at the WERF site. For some projects the Executive Summary is available and can be downloaded for free without registering on the WERF site.].

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( EXTRAMURAL DOCUMENT/ CONTRACT)
Product Published Date:05/29/2013
Record Last Revised:04/22/2015
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 307442