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The filtration of public water-supplies / Third edition, revised and enlarged. cover

The filtration of public water-supplies / Third edition, revised and enlarged.

Chapter 18: UNDERDRAINING.
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About This Book

This book presents a practical, engineering-focused treatment of water filtration for municipal supplies, combining historical perspective, design principles, and operational guidance. It explains types of filters, construction of beds and underdrains, selection and grading of sands and gravels, rates of filtration, head loss, and mechanisms for regulating flow. Procedures for cleaning, sand-washing, and intermittent operation are described alongside theoretical and bacteriological considerations that bear on efficiency. Methods for measuring and removing turbidity and color, the effects of suspended mud, coagulation practices, and numerous design examples and appendices illustrate how to plan, build, and maintain effective filtration works.

UNDERDRAINING.

The underdrains of a filter are simply useful for collecting the filtered water; they play no part in the purification. One of the first requirements of successful filtration is that the rate of filtration shall be practically the same in all parts of the filter. This is most difficult to secure when the filter has just been cleaned and the friction of the sand layer is at a minimum. If the friction of the water in entering and passing through the underdrains is considerable, the more remote parts of the filters will work under less pressure, and will thus do less than their share of the work, while the parts near the outlet will be overtaxed, and filtering at too high rates will yield poor effluents.

To avoid this condition the underdrains must have such a capacity that their frictional resistance will be only a small fraction of the friction in the sand itself just after cleaning.