Title: household water system
1Household Water Systems
2Household Water System Components
- Water Source (well, spring, pond, or cistern)
- Pump
- Pressure Tank
- Pressure Switch
- Check Valve
- Piping
- Optional Treatment Equipment
- (Softener, Filter, Disinfection Unit, etc)
3Typical Shallow-Well Water System
SUPPLY PIPE TO HOUSE
PUMP POWER CONTROL BOX
SUCTION PIPE
PRESSURE TANK PRESSURE SWITCH
CHECK VALVE
SHALLOW-WELL JET PUMP
WELL CASING
4Water Pump Options
Suction Lift (feet) Pump Type
0 18 Horizontal Centrifugal
0 28 Shallow-Well Centrifugal Jet
0 200 Deep-Well Centrifugal Jet
0 500 Multi-stage Submersible
5PRESSURE SWITCH
Pump House with Shallow Well Pump
6Jet Pump Installations
Deep-Well Jet Pump (Two-Pipe System)
Shallow-Well Jet Pump
7To Pressure Tank
- Jet Pump Schematic Diagram
- Increases practical suction lift by diverting
part of the pump discharge to the ejector on the
lift pipe - The greater the suction lift, the greater the
percentage of discharge water must be diverted - Maximum practical lift is limited to
approximately 200 feet by economics
Pressure Pipe (Return Flow)
Lift Pipe (Upward Flow)
Jet Ejector (Venturi)
Nozzle
Intake Pipe
Water
8Deep-Well Jet Pump Ejector Units
Packer System Return Flow Lift Pipe (w/
Venturi) Nozzle Foot Valve Packer Suction Pipe
Two-Pipe System Well Cap Return Pipe Lift
Pipe (w/ Venturi) Nozzle Foot Valve Intake
Strainer
9- Submersible Water Pumps
- - Good for deep wells
- High efficiency
- Wells as small as 4 diameter
10FROST LINE
Submersible Pump with Pitless Adapter
11Pressure Switch
- Controls water pump
- Turns on when system pressure drops to 20 (30)
psi - Turns off when system pressure rises to 40 (50)
psi - Low pressure shut-down in case well water level
drops
12Pressure Tank
- Is not meant to provide household water storage
- Delays pump turn-on and extends pump run time
- Eliminates frequent, short On/Off cycles which
can burn up the pump motor - Volume of pre-charged tank should be at least
6 times the delivery of the pump in 1 minute - Volume of uncharged tank should be at least
10 times the delivery of the pump in 1 minute
13Pressure Tank
Pipe Plug (to be removed when system is drained
to correct waterlogging)
Typical uncharged pressure tank (no air
bladder/diaphragm) installation
Pressure Switch
Main Power Cutoff Switch
Delivery Pipe from Pump
14Useable Storage Capacity of Pressure Tanks Over
Normal Operating Range (Not Pre-charged)
82 gallons
Water Level at
12 gallons
42 gallons
40 lbs 20 lbs
15Examples of Pre-charged Pressure Tanks
16Effect of Waterlogging on Useable Pressure Tank
Capacity
17Waterlogging
Pipe Plug (to be removed when system is drained
to correct waterlogging)
- To correct waterlogged pressure tanks
- -Turn off power to pump
- Open a faucet to drain system
- Remove pipe plug at top of tank to let air into
tank and finish draining system - Replace pipe plug (use teflon tape or pipe
compound to seal properly) - Close faucet
- Turn on power
- Repeat this process whenever the pump begins
starting immediately every time a faucet is opened
Power Switch
18 Controlling Waterlogging in Pressure Tanks
19Submersible Pump Check Valve Cutaway
Water Flow
20Household Water Requirement
- Typical Usage 50-100 gallons/person-day
(drinking, bathing, laundry, toilet flushing,
dishwashing, cooking, etc.) - Well Flow Rate Requirement
- Minimum Acceptable Rate 5 gpm
- Preferred Rate 10 gpm
- Minimum Fire Protection Rate 20 gpm
21Household Water Requirements
Use Flow Rate (gpm) Volume per Use (gal.)
Washing Machine 5 20-35
Dishwasher 2 6-20
Shower/Bathtub 5 20-60
Toilet 3 1.6-5.0
Kitchen Sink 3 2-4
Water Softener Recharge 8 50-150
22Farmstead Water Requirement(Flow Rate)
Use Minimum Preferred
Stock Auto. Waterers 0.5 gpm 2 gpm
Poultry Auto. Waterers 0.25 gpm 1 gpm
Milkhouse Cleaning 3 gpm 5 gpm
Manure Washdown 5 gpm 10 gpm
Outdoor Hydrant 5 gpm 10 gpm
Outdoor Hydrant (Fire) 10 gpm 20 gpm
23Intermediate Water Storage
- Improves usability of low-yield wells
- Well pump operates at low flow for extended
periods (overnight) to fill storage tank - Pressure pump uses water from storage to supply
immediate household demand - Minimum intermediate storage capacity should be
at least equal to daily household water use (2-3
days storage capacity preferred)
24Intermediate Storage for Low-Yield Wells
25Low Yield Well Water System
Inlet from Well Pump
Intermediate Storage Tank (filled by submersible
well pump)
Pressure Pump
Check Valve
Pressure Tank
Pressure Pump Suction Line
Supply Line to House
26Water Treatment Equipment
- Disinfection Equipment
- Filters
- Water Softeners
27Water Disinfection Options-Bacteria Viruses-
- Chlorination
- Shock chlorination
- Continuous chlorination
- Dry pellet chlorinator
- Chlorine solution feed pump
- Chlorine solution venturi injector
- Ozonation
- Ultraviolet Irradiation
28Shock Chlorination
- Use laundry bleach (5.25) w/ no additives
- Pour 4 pints of bleach into well vent for each
100 gallons of water in system - Recirculate water into well for 20 minutes
- Open all outlets until bleach is smelled
- Let system stand idle overnight (4 hrs minimum)
- Flush system
- Re-test for bacteria after 10-14 days of use
29Dry Pellet Chlorinators
- -Electric powered (110 or 220 volt)
- -Controlled by pump controller
- Few moving parts
- Uses calcium hypochlorite tablets
- Treats water in the well
- Longer Cl contact time
- No solutions to mix
- Treats up to 20 gpm
30Venturi Solution Injector
- Injects any liquid solution
- Injection rate proportional to water flow rate
- Adjustable over wide range of flow and injection
rates
31Metering Pump
- Injects any type of solution
- Controlled by water pump controller
- Constant injection rate
- Adjusts to wide range of flow and injection rates
32Ultraviolet Disinfection Unit
SIGHT PORT
33Water Treatment Options- Iron or Manganese -
- Shock Chlorination
- Continuous Chlorination
- Dry pellet chlorinator
- Chlorine solution feed pump
- Chlorine solution venturi injector
- Ozonation
- Oxidizing (Greensand) Filter
- Ion Exchange Water Softener
34Iron Treatment Options
Iron Level (mg/l) Iron Bacteria Clear or Red When Drawn pH Treatment Method
0-5 No Clear 7 Softening
0-5 Yes Clear 7 Shock Chlorination or Oxidizing Filter
5-20 No Clear 7 Shock Chlorination or Oxidizing Filter
5-20 Yes Clear or Red 7 Oxidizing Filter, Shock or Continuous Chlorination
0-20 No Red 7 Oxidizing Filter
20-30 No Clear or Red 7 Continuous Chlorination or Oxidizing Filter
35Water Treatment Options-Corrosion-
- Neutralizing Filter
- Limestone chips
- Marble chips
- Caustic Soda (NaOH) Feeder
- metering pump or venturi injector
- Soda Ash (Na2CO3) Feeder
- Metering pump or venturi injector
36Water Treatment Options-Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S)
Rotten Egg Odor-
- Activated Carbon Filter
- Oxidizing Filter
- Shock Chlorination
- Continuous Chlorination
- Dry pellet chlorinator
- Chlorine solution metering pump
- Chlorine solution venturi injector
- Ozonation
37TDS/Mineral Treatment
- Reverse Osmosis
- Distillation
38(No Transcript)
394-stage Reverse Osmosis Unit with Tank and Faucet
40Reverse Osmosis Systems
- Reduce mineral concentrations by ? 90
- 15 gallon/day under-sink units ? 150-300
- Require pre-softening with hard water
- Operate on water system pressure (40 psi)
- WastewaterTreated water ratio ? 4 or 51
- Membranes ?70-100 each ? 5 year life
41Distillation Unit
Vaporization Chamber
Gas Vent
Condensing Coil
Raw Water Inlet
Rising Steam
Distilled Water
Drain
Heating Element
42Countertop Distillers
- initial cost 150-1000
- 4-8 hours/gallon treatment rate
- 2.75-3.0 kWh/gallon energy consumption
- removes 99.9 of all contaminants
- electric co-ops often subsidize purchase
43Carbon Filters
- Remove contaminants by adsorption on carbon
particle surface - Hierarchy of contaminant adsorption
- Saturated filters can actually increase
concentration of some contaminants - Not effective on nitrate, hardness or bacteria
- Filter cold water only
- Bigger is better - more surface area
44Cartridge Filters
Carbon Cartridge (taste, odor, chlorine,
organics) Particle Cartridge (sand, sediment)
Filter Wrench Filter Housing
45Ion Exchange Water Softeners
- Exchange sodium ions for calcium and magnesium
ions in water - Increase EC somewhat
- May be dietary hazard - hypertension (adds ?140
mg/l of sodium in Hard water) - Use potassium salt (KCl) for health reasons
46Ion exchange softeners replace Ca and Mg with
Na ions. Zeolite medium is recharged with Na by
NaCl brine when depleted.
47Ion Exchange Water Softener with Sensor-
Controlled Recharge
48Softener Selection Considerations
- Required grain capacity
- Daily water use (household population)
- Water hardness
- Desired regeneration schedule
- Initial cost
- Water conservation
- Other (Iron removal, etc.)
49Ion Exchange Water Softener Capacity
- Rated by grains of hardness treated between
regenerations - 1 grain/gallon (gpg) 17.1 mg/l
- Example
- Water hardness 200 mg/l 200/17.1 11.7 gpg
- Softener Capacity 30,000 grains
- Household Population 4 persons
- Calculate
- Water Use 4 persons x 50gal./person-day 200
gal./day - Daily Hardness Treated 200 gpd x 11.7 gpg
2339 grains/day - Regeneration Interval 30,000 grains/ 2339
grains/day 12.8 days
50Recommended Softener Sizes
Pump Capacity (gpm) Softener Capacity (grains) Water Hardness (mg/l)
3 4 10,000 350
5 6 15,000 500
7 8 20,000 850
9 12 30,000 1200
12 20 40,000 1500
51Ion Exchange Water Softener Recharge Control
Method
Water Use
Initial Cost -
-
- -Time Clock
- -Flow Meter
- -Hardness Sensor
-
52Typical Programmable Water Softener Controller
53Water Softening
- Permanent magnet water softeners dont work
- Electrostatic and catalytic descalers may
descale water, but dont soften it - Scale will not buildup on pipes, water heater
elements, bathtubs etc. - Sudsing action of soaps is not improved
54Private Water System Resources