Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 10 Par: 6 (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Water Event Categorization Using Sub-Metered Water and Coincident Electricity Data

J. Scott Vitter and Michael Webber    

Resumen

This study evaluated the potential for data from dedicated water sub-meters and circuit-level electricity gauges to support accurate water end-use disaggregation tools. A supervised learning algorithm was trained to categorize end-use events from an existing database consisting of features related to whole-home and hot water use. Additional features were defined based on dedicated irrigation metering and circuit-level electricity gauges on major water appliances. Support vector machine classifiers were trained and tested on portions of the database using multiple feature combinations, and then externally validated on water event data collected under dissimilar conditions from a demonstration house in Austin, Texas, USA. On the testing data, a trained classifier achieved true positive rates for occurrences and volume exceeding 95% for most categories and 93% for toilet events. Performance for faucet events was less than 90%. Initial results suggest that dedicated sub-meters and circuit-level electricity gauges can facilitate highly accurate categorization with simple features that do not rely on flow rate gradients.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Marta Hervás, Fernando Martínez-Alzamora, Pilar Conejos and Joan Carles Alonso    
In this paper, several methods for the calculation of water quality evolution in drinking water distribution networks are analysed. The Lagrangian Time-Driven method has been implemented in the Epanet simulation software since version 2.0. In version 2.2... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Majid Niazkar, Margherita Evangelisti, Cosimo Peruzzi, Andrea Galli, Marco Maglionico and Daniele Masseroni    
The first flush (FF) phenomenon is commonly associated with a relevant load of pollutants, raising concerns about water quality and environmental management in agro-urban areas. An FF event can potentially transport contaminated water into a receiving wa... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Elias Dimitriou, Andreas Efstratiadis, Ioanna Zotou, Anastasios Papadopoulos, Theano Iliopoulou, Georgia-Konstantina Sakki, Katerina Mazi, Evangelos Rozos, Antonios Koukouvinos, Antonis D. Koussis, Nikos Mamassis and Demetris Koutsoyiannis    
Storm Daniel initiated on 3 September 2023, over the Northeastern Aegean Sea, causing extreme rainfall levels for the following four days, reaching an average of about 360 mm over the Peneus basin, in Thessaly, Central Greece. This event led to extensive... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Devendra M. Amatya, Timothy J. Callahan, Sourav Mukherjee, Charles A. Harrison, Carl C. Trettin, Andrzej Walega, Dariusz Mlynski and Kristen D. Emmett    
Hydrology and meteorological data from relatively undisturbed watersheds aid in identifying effects on ecosystem services, tracking hydroclimatic trends, and reducing model uncertainties. Sustainable forest, water, and infrastructure management depends o... ver más
Revista: Hydrology

 
Somayeh Emami and Hossein Dehghanisanij    
The recent problems of Lake Urmia (LU) are caused by extensive and complex socio-ecological factors that require a comprehensive approach to consider the relationships between users and identify failure factors at the basin level. For this purpose, an ag... ver más
Revista: Water