Characterization of Drip Emitters and Computing Distribution Uniformity in a Drip Irrigation System at Low Pressure Under Uniform Land Slopes

Characterization of Drip Emitters and Computing Distribution Uniformity in a Drip Irrigation System at Low Pressure Under Uniform Land Slopes
Author: Deba Prasad Dutta
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

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Characteristics of emitters under low pressure are essential for designing drip irrigation systems. Low pressure data for drip emitters are not available from manufacturers. A laboratory test was conducted to evaluate the performance of five types of newly manufactured drip tapes, especially under a low pressure distribution system. The five drip products that were tested were (i) Toro Drip in PC (PCS 1810-18- 100), (ii) T-Tape (TT15-1245-0100), (iii) Mister_LS (MLD-HDT100), (iv) Mister_PS (MLD-1PC 25), and (v) Netafim (Techline CV 560 050). Drip tapes tested in this study have design discharge rates of 4.00 L/hr @ 206.84 Kpa (1.06 gph @ 30 psi), 1.02 L/hr @ 55.16 Kpa (0.27 gph @ 8 psi), 3.785 L/hr @ 172.37 Kpa (1.00 gph @ 25 psi), 3.785 L/hr @172.37 Kpa (1.00 gph @ 25 psi), and 0.984 L/hr @ 206.84 Kpa (0.26 gph @ 20psi), respectively. All of them, except T-Tape, were pressure compensating (PC) emitters; the T-Tape was non-pressure compensating (NPC). For all products, except Toro, the emitter spacing was 0.305 m (12 inches) and for Toro, it was 0.46 m (18 inches). Mister_PS (MLD-1PC 25) was the point source (PS) emitter and all others were line source emitters. Drip products were tested with 15 different operating pressures ranging from 5.97 KPa (0.87 psi) to 344.74 KPa (50.00 psi). From an evaluation of 60 emitters from each product, the Toro brand showed an average uniformity coefficient (UC) of 91.24 %, with a coefficient of variation (Cv) of 0.06, T-Tape drip products showed an average UC of 96.63 % with a Cv of 0.04, Mister_ LS showed an average UC of 93.12 % with a Cv of 0.08, Mister_PS showed an average UC of 96.33 % with a Cv of 0.04, and Netafim showed an average UC of 97.92 % with a Cv of 0.02. Flow rate vs. pressure head (Q-H) curves were also developed for each drip emitter tested. From emitter exponent values it was observed that all of the pressure compensating (PC) products behaved like NPC emitters at low pressures, although they behaved like PC emitters under normal operating pressures. From statistical analysis, it was determined that except for Netafim product, all other tested products were effective under low operating pressures as were under high operating or recommended pressures. Netafim product had no emission under low pressures. Using the measured average emission rate and developed Q-H curves, the distribution uniformities of all products except Netafim were calculated under low pressure ranges of 5.97 KPa (0.87 psi) to 23.88 KPa (3.50 psi) for different lengths of laterals and under 0%, 1%, 2% uniform land slopes. The range of distribution uniformity (DU) was from about 70% to 90%, which can be classified as "good" to "excellent."

Water Resources and Environment

Water Resources and Environment
Author: Miklas Scholz
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 496
Release: 2015-11-17
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1315644665

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The 2015 International Conference on Water Resource and Environment (WRE2015) aims to provide a platform where scholars from different countries can exchange ideas, opinions and views. This book is divided into four main themes:1. Hydrology and water resources;2. Water pollution; 3. Water treatment methods, and4. Freshwater ecosystems. Exploring to

Closed Circuit Trickle Irrigation Design

Closed Circuit Trickle Irrigation Design
Author: Megh R. Goyal
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 430
Release: 2015-08-03
Genre: Science
ISBN: 149872437X

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Closed circuit trickle irrigation is a form of micro irrigation that increases energy and water efficiency by using closed circuit drip irrigation systems designs. Modifications are made to traditional micro irrigation methods to reduce some of the problems and constraints, such as low compressor water at the end of irrigation lines. This approach

Parametric Design and Performance Validation of Low-cost, Low-pressure Drip Emitters and Irrigation Systems

Parametric Design and Performance Validation of Low-cost, Low-pressure Drip Emitters and Irrigation Systems
Author: Julia Alexandrovna Sokol
Publisher:
Total Pages: 175
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

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This thesis proposes and validates methods to reduce the cost and energy use of drip irrigation systems, with the aim of increasing their adoption among smallholder farmers. By 2050, the growing world population will require a 55% increase in food production above 2010 levels. Yet, agriculture already places a large strain on the earth’s resources, occupying 47% of habitable land area and comprising 70% of freshwater withdrawals. Thus, agricultural intensification needs to occur through increased efficiency, rather than increased resource consumption. While irrigation is an effective means to increase food production over rainfed land, traditional surface and overhead irrigation systems--such as flood, furrow, and sprinkler--have low water use efficiencies. Drip irrigation, which distributes water through a pressurized pipe network and slowly releases it through emitters in the immediate root zone of each crop, has been shown to increase water efficiency by 25-65% over flood or furrow irrigation. However, adoption of drip irrigation is limited by several factors, including high initial cost compared to conventional practices. To address the cost barrier to drip irrigation adoption, this work focuses on modeling, designing, and validating drip components and systems that operate at low pressures, reducing energy consumption and the costs of pumps and power systems. These savings are enabled by pressure-compensating (PC) emitters--which maintain a constant flow rate with variations in pressure--specifically designed for low-pressure operation. The first part of this thesis experimentally validates the ability of low-pressure PC online emitters (used for tree crops) designed by the MIT Global Engineering and Research Lab to reduce pumping power and energy in a series of field trials in the Middle East and North Africa. With a minimum operating pressure of 0.15 bar, these online emitters are shown to reduce pumping energy by at least 43% compared to commercial emitters with higher operating pressures, without compromising water distribution uniformity. The next section focuses on the design of low-pressure PC inline emitters (used for vegetable crops), which are bonded to the interior of irrigation tubing. While inline emitters are manufactured widely, their design in industry occurs largely by trial-and-error, which may limit product performance. To address this gap, this section presents a new, fully-analytical, parametric model for predicting the activation pressure and flow rate of typical inline PC emitters from their geometry and material properties of the membrane. The model’s utility is demonstrated by systematically redesigning a commercial emitter to reduce its minimum compensating pressure from 0.4 bar to 0.15-0.25 bar, depending on the membrane used, while maintaining a similar flow rate. The last section of this thesis places low-pressure emitter designs in a system-level context to evaluate their impact and suggest further research directions. Concurrently, it presents a flexible, parametric model for designing cost-optimal drip irrigation systems with grid and off-grid power sources for any farm location, size, and crop. When applied to case studies representative of typical farms in Morocco, the model shows potential reductions of up to 20% in initial cost and up to 9% in lifetime system cost with optimized low-pressure drip systems, compared to conventional system designs. The results are used to identify and recommend opportunities for further system cost reduction.

Design of drip irrigation lines

Design of drip irrigation lines
Author: I. P. Wu
Publisher:
Total Pages: 27
Release: 1974
Genre:
ISBN:

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The friction drop in a drip line irrigation system can be determined by considering turbulent flow in a smooth pipe; either the Blasius equation or the Williams and Hazen equation can be used. Due to the characteristics of drip irrigation, where the discharge in the pipe decreases according to length, the friction drop is not linearly proportional to the length but is an exponential function of the length of the pipe. The friction drop pattern, however, has a fixed shape depending on the flow conditions. Laboratory results showed the curve (figure 3) for turbulent flow in smooth pipe can be used to represent the friction drop pattern along a drip line. If the total friction drop delta H and length L are known, the friction drop at any point along the drip linecan be estimated. The curve of friction drop combined with the pressure gain or loss due to down slopes or up slopes (where the drip line is laid) determines the pressure distribution along the line. Since the outflow (orifice or emitter outflow) is controlled by the pressure, if the pressure distribution is known, the emitter discharge distribution can be determined. A uniformity coefficient can be calculated from the discharge distribution. A design chart has been introduced, consisting of design pressure and length of the drip line, total discharge, slope of the line, and uniformity coefficient. The chart will help to design a drip irrigation line based on a desirable or acceptable uniformity. The designer can try different combinations of pressure ...

Modeling and Designing the Future of Drip Irrigation

Modeling and Designing the Future of Drip Irrigation
Author: Pulkit Shamshery
Publisher:
Total Pages: 74
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

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Drip irrigation is a means of distributing the exact amount of water a plant needs by dripping water directly onto the root zone. It can produce up to 90% more crops than rain-fed irrigation, and reduce water consumption by 70% compared to conventional flood irrigation. In the coming years, the demand for new, low-cost, low-power drip irrigation technology will continue to grow, particularly in developing countries. It will enable millions of poor farmers to rise out of poverty by growing more and higher value crops, while not contributing to overconsumption of water. The key inhibitor to drip adoption has been the high initial investment cost. A cost and pressure analysis revealed that a reduction in activation pressure of pressure compensating (PC) drip emitters - which can maintain a constant flow rate under variations in pressure, to ensure uniform water distribution on a field - can reduce the cost of off-grid drip systems by up to 50%. These emitter have been designed and optimized empirically in the past. In this thesis, I present a parametric model that describes the fluid and solid mechanics that govern the behavior of a common PC emitter architecture, which uses a flexible diaphragm to limit flow. The model was validated by testing nine prototypes with geometric variations, all of which matched predicted performance to within R2 = 0.85. This parametric model was then coupled with a genetic algorithm to achieve a lower activation pressure of 0.15 bar for not only the 8.2 lph emitter, but also the 4, 6, 7 lph emitters. These new drip emitters, with attributes that improve performance and lower cost, are a step closer to making drip irrigation economically accessible to all throughout the world.

Drip Irrigation in the Home Landscape

Drip Irrigation in the Home Landscape
Author: L Schwankl, T Prichard
Publisher: UCANR Publications
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2015-01-16
Genre: Gardening
ISBN: 9781601073495

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Research Bulletin

Research Bulletin
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 114
Release: 1988
Genre: Agriculture
ISBN:

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Sprinkle and Trickle Irrigation

Sprinkle and Trickle Irrigation
Author: Jack Keller
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 652
Release: 2012-11-05
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781475714272

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The design text, Sprinkle and Trickle Irrigation, opens up a new and clear window through which to view the physics, economics, design, and manage ment of pressurized irrigation systems. A broad array of system types and ap plications have been covered in detail to provide for complete understanding of systems design. Topics include soil-water-plant relations, general planning con cepts, hydraulics, economics, sizing, operation, maintenance, and special uses. Pressurized irrigation system types covered include hand-line, wheel-line, solid set, traveler, center-pivot, linear-moving and big-gun-sprinkler systems, pump ing systems, and a broad array of trickle system components. The work in this text culminates earlier major works by Jack Keller on the W. R. Ames Company Irrigation Handbook (1967), Rain Bird Sprinkler Man ufacturing Corp. 's Trickle Irrigation Design (1975), and the USDA-Soil Con servation Service's National Engineering Handbook, Section 15: Irrigation Chapter 11: Sprinkle Irrigation (1983) and Chapter 15: Trickle Irrigation (1984). These earlier works form the foundation upon which the majority of currently used design texts are based. The years of design and troubleshooting experiences of the authors and wide ranges of environments and design appli cations in which they have worked have resulted in the substance and robustness of this text in stated relationships and procedures.