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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 9: SIZE OF FILTER-BEDS.
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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.

SIZE OF FILTER-BEDS.

The total area of filters required in any case is calculated from the quantity of water required, the rate of filtration, and an allowance for filters out of use while being cleaned. To prevent interruptions of the supply at times of cleaning, the filtering area is divided into beds which are operated separately, the number and size of the beds depending upon local conditions. The cost per acre is decreased with large beds on account of there being less wall or embankment required, while, on the other hand, the convenience of operation may suffer, especially in small works. It is also frequently urged that with large filters it is difficult or impossible to get an even rate of filtration over the entire area owing to the frictional resistance of the underdrains for the more distant parts of the filter. A discussion of this point is given in Chapter III, page 41. At Hamburg, where the size of the single beds, 1.88 acres each, is larger than at any other place, it is shown that there is no serious cause for anxiety; and even if there were, the objectionable resistance could be still farther reduced by a few changes in the under-drains. The sizes of filter-beds used at a large number of places are given in Appendix IV.

At a number of places having severe winters, filters are vaulted over as a protection from cold, and in the most important of these, Berlin, Warsaw, and St. Petersburg, the areas of the single beds are nearly the same, namely, from 0.52 to 0.59 acre. The works with open filters at London (seven companies), Amsterdam, and Breslau have filter-beds from 0.82 to 1.50 acres each. Liverpool and Hamburg alone use filters with somewhat larger areas. Large numbers of works with both covered and open filters have much smaller beds than these sizes, but generally this is to avoid too small a number of divisions in a small total area, although such works have sometimes been extended with the growth of the cities until they now have a considerable number of very small basins.