Science Inventory

Patterns in Potential Impacts Associated With Contamination Events in Water Distribution Systems

Citation:

Davis, M. J. AND Robert J. Janke. Patterns in Potential Impacts Associated With Contamination Events in Water Distribution Systems. JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT. American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), Reston, VA, 137(1):1-9, (2011).

Impact/Purpose:

Properly designing contamination warning systems requires an understanding of potential public health impacts for a range of contaminated water systems and a wide range of contaminants. To address this need, we determined potential impacts for 12 actual systems serving populations ranging from ∼104 to over 106 persons by simulating contamination events for the systems. We found several consistent patterns in the estimated impacts (defined as the size of the population receiving an ingestion dose above a given level). Significant impacts, those similar to worst-case impacts, result from injections of contaminants at only a minority of nodes. For contaminants with high thresholds for adverse effects, significant exposures are concentrated near the injection location, and impacts are not sensitive to population served. However, for contaminants with low thresholds, significant exposures are present over a significant fraction of the system, and impacts are sensitive to population. When exposures are concentrated near the injection node, the area affected tends to decrease with increasing population density. Accounting for all possible exposures and events may complicate the design of contamination warning systems

Description:

Journal article

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:11/10/2010
Record Last Revised:09/26/2016
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 208783