Publication: Evolutionary Multi-Objective Optimal Control of Combined Sewer Overflows
Type:
Article
Date
2015-03-18
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Abstract
This paper presents a novel multi-objective evolutionary optimization approach
for the active control of intermittent unsatisfactory discharges from combined sewer
systems. The procedure proposed considers the unsteady flows and water quality in the
sewers together with the wastewater treatment costs. The distinction between the portion
of wastewater that receives full secondary treatment and the overall capacity of the
wastewater treatment works (including storm overflow tanks) is addressed. Temporal
and spatial variations in the concentrations of the primary contaminants are incorporated
also. The formulation is different from previous approaches in the literature in that in
addition to the wastewater treatment cost we consider at once the relative polluting
effects of the various primary contaminants in wastewater. This is achieved by incorporating a measure of the overall pollution called the effluent quality index. The differences
between two diametrically opposed control objectives are illustrated, i.e. the minimization of the pollution of the receiving water or, alternatively, the minimization of the
wastewater treatment cost. Results are included for a realistic interceptor sewer system
that show that the combination of a multi-objective genetic algorithm and a stormwater
management model is effective. The genetic algorithm achieved consistently the frontier
optimal control settings that, in turn, revealed the trade-offs between the wastewater
treatment cost and pollution of the receiving water.
Description
Keywords
Optimal control, Combined sewer system, Effluent quality index, Integrated wastewater management, Water pollution control, Wastewater treatment cost
