Auto Desk Storm Sanitary Analysis 2015
Auto Desk Storm Sanitary Analysis 2015
Contents
Autodesk SSA Technical Capabilities and Functionalities .......................................................................................3
Overall Capabilities ......................................................................................................................................................3
GIS Support....................................................................................................................................................................5
Hydrology Modeling Capabilities ................................................................................................................................6
Pumps ..........................................................................................................................................................................12
NPDES .........................................................................................................................................................................14
Overall Capabilities
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis can simultaneously model complex hydrology, hydraulics, and
water quality. This software can be used for designing and analyzing:
Typical Applications
The software has been used in thousands of sewer and stormwater studies throughout the world.
Typical applications include:
• Design and sizing of drainage system components for better flood control
• Design and sizing of detention facilities for better flood control and water quality protection
• Floodplain mapping of natural channel systems
• Designing control strategies for minimizing CSOs
• Evaluating the impact of inflow and infiltration on SSOs
• Generating non–point source pollutant loadings for waste load allocation studies
• Evaluating the effectiveness of BMPs for reducing wet weather pollutant loadings
AutoCAD Map 3D and Civil 3D Support
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis easily shares data with AutoCAD Map 3D and Civil 3D software.
Using GIS shapefiles, Hydraflow Storm Sewer, or LandXML files, the software can share subbasin,
sewer pipe, and structure entity data with AutoCAD Map 3D. In addition, AutoCAD drawings can be
loaded as a background layer, enabling you to quickly digitize a network model, confirm the network
layout, or enhance the output modeling results.
The software can automatically create plan and profile drawings. This helps speed up the creation of
final deliverables associated with your engineering project. Profile sheets include:
All elements are stored on their own individual drawing layers, so you can quickly change colors, line
styles, text styles, and more. You can change the default settings, such as colors and annotations, to fit
your corporate CAD standards.
Model Development
Simulation models can be quickly developed using a variety of different sources. Network components
can be directly imported from CAD and GIS. The network model can be interactively created using a
mouse by pointing and clicking. Graphical symbols are used to represent network elements, such as
manholes, pipes, pumps, weirs, ditches, channels, catch basin inlets, and detention ponds. The
software enables you, at any time, to interactively add, insert, delete, or move any network element,
automatically updating the model. For example, selecting and moving a manhole automatically moves
all connected pipes, ditches, channels, and pumps.
Pipes can be curvilinear and lengths can be automatically computed. Scanned aerial orthophoto TIFF
images and maps, as well as GIS and CAD files of streets, parcels, and buildings can be imported and
displayed as background images. This enables you to more quickly digitize a network model, confirm
the network layout, or enhance the output modeling results. Moreover, you can point to or click any
graphical symbol from the plan view to quickly determine the defined input data and output modeling
results.
Model Representation
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis software creates a subbasin-node-link–based model that
performs hydrology, hydraulic, and water quality analysis of stormwater and wastewater drainage
systems, including sewage treatment plants and water quality control devices. Subbasins contribute
rainfall runoff and water quality pollutants, which then enter nodes. A node can represent the junction of
two or more links (a manhole, for example), a storm drain catch basin inlet, the location of a flow or
pollutant input into the system, or a storage element (such as a detention pond, retention pond,
treatment structure, or lake). From nodes, flow is then routed (or conveyed) along links. A link
represents a hydraulic element (for example, a pipe, open channel stream, swale, pump, standpipe,
culvert, or weir) that transports water and water quality pollutants.
Analysis Output
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis software’s graphical capabilities can provide detailed plan view
plots, profile plots, and time series plots. On the plan view, the software provides automatic color-coding
of links and nodes based on any input or output property, allowing the network to be color-coded based
on pipe sizes, pipe slope, flow rates, velocities, capacity, water quality concentrations, or any other
attribute. Directional flow arrows can be plotted on top of pipes to show the flow direction for any time
step. Furthermore, pipes can be plotted with variable width and nodes with variable radius, so you can
more quickly identify those areas of the network experiencing the most surcharge, flooding, pollutant
concentration, and so on.
The software will automatically generate graphical animations for plan view plots and profile plots to
show output result values that change with respect to time. These animations can be recorded as AVI
or WMV movie files that can be viewed independent of the software.
Multiple time-series plots can be generated for various network elements, such as pipe flow, velocity,
junction water surface elevation, pollutant concentration, or any other analysis output attribute. In
addition, you can display and compare multiple result files simultaneously, enabling direct comparison
between different simulation models.
Custom Reports
Comprehensive input data and output analysis reports can be generated using the built-in report
generator. The software allows for full customization of input and output reporting giving you greater
flexibility and functionality when developing specialized user-defined reports. These reports can be fully
customized to help meet any combination of modeling criteria.
GIS Support
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis software can share spatial data and visual representation of the
stormwater and wastewater sewer network with most GIS spatial databases, allowing the software to be
part of the stormwater and wastewater management and planning system. These capabilities can
greatly assist the decision-making processes for network asset inventory, rehabilitation requirements,
and financial planning.
The software can intelligently import most any GIS database structure, using attribute mapping and
geocoding. Also, the analysis solution results can be exported back to the GIS database, so locations of
CSO and SSO spills, manhole overflows, pipe surcharging, and floodplain flooding can be more quickly
identified.
Spatial variability in all of these processes is achieved by dividing a study area into a collection of
smaller, homogeneous subcatchment areas, each containing its own fraction of pervious and
impervious sub-areas. Overland flow can be routed between sub-areas, between subcatchments, or
between entry points of a drainage system.
The following matrix correlates typical project types with available hydrology methods.
The software includes the following hydrology models to help determine surface drainage runoff:
• USEPA SWMM 5.0 (also imports and exports XPSWMM models)
• NRCS (SCS) TR-20 and TR-55
• U.S. Army Corps HEC-1
• Rational Method
• Modified Rational Method
• U.K. Modified Rational (Wallingford Procedure)
• DeKalb Rational Method
• Santa Barbara Unit Hydrograph
• Delmarva Unit Hydrograph
• Long-Term Continuous Simulation
• Maricopa and Pima Counties (Arizona) Papadakis-Kazan Method
• Harris County (Texas) Method
The following hydrology methods and models are not directly supported. However, the output from
these different hydrology models may be imported into the software and then hydraulically routed.
Time of Concentration
The software includes the following time of concentration methods:
Time of concentration is only selectable when the EPA SWMM subbasin hydrology method is not
selected. When the EPA SWMM subbasin hydrology method is used, the time of concentration is
computed by the Kinematic Wave method and cannot be changed.
EPA SWMM Infiltration Methods
The following infiltration methods are provided with the EPA SWMM hydrology method:
Rainfall Designer
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis software includes a Rainfall Designer which, after you select any
location within the U.S., will provide the design rainfall for the specified storm frequency. Alternatively, a
user-defined rainfall can be specified. Then the appropriate storm distribution can be selected and the
design storm is created. Multiple design storms can be created and analyzed.
• Site-specific storm distribution database with over 3,500 up-to-date rainfall recording stations
across the United States
• Automatically determines design rainfall (based on study location) for 1, 2, 5, 10, 25, 50, and
100 year return frequencies
• Define any storm duration, multiple storm events
• Numerous storm distributions, including SCS, Huff, Eastern Washington, Florida, Chicago
Storm, Hurricane Hazel, and user-defined
For Rational and Modified Rational methods, rainfall intensity data can be defined by either:
• IDF—Table Rainfall intensity data is defined by a table of storm durations (in minutes) versus
return periods (in years). This is the most commonly used option.
• BDE—Table Rainfall intensity data is defined by a table of B-D-E coefficients versus return
periods (in years) using the FWHA intensity equation.
• ABCD—Table Rainfall intensity data is defined by a table of third-degree polynomial coefficients
A, B, C, and D versus return periods (in years).
• Intensity Direct Entry—A single rainfall intensity used to analyze peak runoff and inlet spread
results from the model.
Hydraulic Modeling Capabilities
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis contains a flexible set of hydraulic modeling capabilities used to
help route runoff and external inflows through the drainage system network of pipes, channels,
storage/treatment units, and diversion structures. The software can simultaneously simulate dual
drainage networks (stormwater sewer network and city streets as separate but connected conveyance
pathways) and inlet capacity. It can quickly determine the amount of stormwater flow that is intercepted
by the stormwater network inlets and the amount of stormwater flow that bypasses and is then routed
further downstream to other inlets. Hydraulic network modeling is performed by the Kinematic Wave or
Hydrodynamic (in other words, Saint Venant equation) routing methods. The software can account for:
Kinematic wave routing provides a nonlinear reservoir formulation for channels and pipes, including
translation and attenuation effects that assume the water surface is parallel to the invert slope. This
method cannot simulate backwater or reverse flow. Hydrodynamic routing solves the complete St.
Venant equation throughout the drainage network and includes modeling of backwater effects, flow
reversal, surcharging, looped connections, pressure flow, tidal outfalls, and interconnected ponds. Flow
can also be routed through a variety of different storage elements, such as detention ponds, settling
ponds, and lakes.
The hydraulic grade line (HGL) is computed at nodal points (manholes, junctions, storage structures,
etc.) and along each hydraulic link element (pipes, ditches, open channel reaches). The hydraulic link
HGL profile is computed by segmenting the link into ten smaller segments and then using the direct
step solution method to compute the HGL for each segment. This allows the software to simulate a
more accurate water surface profile along the hydraulic link, which can better account for subcritical and
supercritical flow, partial and complete surcharging, moving hydraulic jumps, critical depth locations,
flow transitions, and other hydraulic flow phenomena.
After computing the HGL for a pipe, the maximum entrance and exit velocities are calculated. From
these velocities, the corresponding velocity heads are determined which are then used to compute the
energy grade line (EGL).
The software can model simple to complex networks, including the ability to:
• Using a wide variety of standard pipe shapes, custom pipe shapes, open channel shapes, as
well as natural channel (HEC-RAS like) cross section geometry
• Applying external flows and water quality inputs from surface runoff, groundwater interflow,
rainfall-dependent infiltration/inflow (RDII), dry weather sanitary flow, and user-defined inflows
• Applying user-defined dynamic control rules to simulate the operation of pumps, orifice
openings, and weir crest levels
Culvert Modeling
Autodesk Storm and Sanitary Analysis incorporates the culvert hydraulic equations from the FHWA
(Federal Highway Administration) Hydraulic Design Series No. 5 (HDS-5) publication Hydraulic Design
of Highway Culverts (2012). The following standard culvert shapes are supported:
Surface Ponding
When flow into a junction (for example, a manhole) exceeds the capacity of the system to transport it
further downstream, the excess volume overflows the system and is lost. If the surface ponding storage
area is defined at a junction, the excess volume can be stored atop the junction, in a ponded fashion,
and will be reintroduced into the system as capacity permits.
For detention pond structures, both simple and complex outlet structures can be considered, including:
• Inlet boxes
• Multiple orifices
• Compound spillways
• Culverts
• User-defined outflow structures
Orifice Outlet Structures
Both circular and rectangular shaped orifices are supported, and can be located vertically (like in a riser
pipe) or horizontally (like in a side-flow orifice). In addition, an orifice can have a flap gate to prevent
backflow. The software provides a lookup table of typical orifice coefficients.
An unsubmerged orifice will initially act as a weir until the top of the orifice is submerged. The discharge
through the orifice for unsubmerged orifice flow is computed using the weir equation. The flow then
transitions to a fully submerged orifice flow using the classical orifice equation. When the orifice is not
completely submerged, a modified weir equation is employed that considers the orifice fraction that is
submerged.
The software provides a lookup table of typical weir coefficients. The weir crest elevation can be
controlled dynamically through user-defined control rules, allowing it to simulate inflatable rubber dams.
When a weir structure is highly submerged due to high tailwater conditions, the flow over the weir no
longer acts like weir flow and the carrying capacity is reduced. In this situation, the weir flow
computations automatically switch to the Villemonte equation. The submergence coefficient is
automatically computed, taken from Roessert’s Handbook of Hydraulics (German).
Pumps
Pumps can be represented as either an in-line lift station or an off-line node representing a wet well,
from which water is pumped to another node in the system according to a programmed rule curve or
step function. Pump performance can be defined by either:
The on/off status of pumps can be controlled dynamically by specifying startup and shutoff water depths
at the inlet node or through user-defined control rules. Rules can also be used to simulate variable
speed pumps that modulate pump flow.
• None (default)
• Constant Flow
• Constant Rate, Free Surface Area
• Horton, Free Surface Area
• Constant Rate, Projected Area
• Horton, Projected Area
• Constant Rate, Wetted Area
• Horton, Wetted Area
• Select from standard curb openings, grated inlets, slotted inlets, median ditch inlets, and
combination inlets
• Account for on-sag and on-grade conditions
• Look up standard curb openings and grated inlets from major foundry manufacturers and
agencies
• Use industry-standard FHWA (Federal Highway Administration) HEC-22 computations
• Compute gutter spread, depth of flow, inlet efficiency, inlet spacing, velocity of flow for gutter
and pavement sections
The hydraulics of storm drain inlets is computed based on the procedures and equations defined in the
FHWA Hydraulic Engineering Circular No. 22 (HEC-22), Urban Drainage Design Manual, Third Edition,
2009. The capacity of storm drain inlets on roadway sag is computed by both the weir and orifice
equations (FHWA Report, Hydraulic Characteristics of Slotted Drain Inlets, 1980). Flow into the storm
drain inlet initially operates as a weir having a crest length equal to the length of drain perimeter that the
flow crosses. The storm drain inlet operates under weir conditions to a depth of about 4 inches (100
mm) and then begins to switch to orifice flow.
• Account for rain gardens, green roofs, rain barrels, bioswales, dry detention ponds, wet ponds,
retention ponds, wetlands, and more
• Model particulate settling, water cleanup, water quality best management practices, and total
maximum daily loads (TMDL)
Water quality routing within channel and pipe links assume that the link behaves as a continuously
stirred tank reactor (CSTR). Although a plug flow reactor assumption is more realistic, the differences
are small if the travel time through the link is on the same order as the routing time step.
Water quality routing through detention ponds follows the same approach used for links. For nodes that
have no storage volume (for example, junctions, inlets, and flow diversions), the water quality exiting the
node is simply the mixture concentration of all water entering the node.
NPDES
As part of the NPDES (National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System) permitting process, modeling
of stormwater quality and quantity may be required. The software can model all aspects of stormwater
quality and quantity, and can incorporate best management practices directly within the model.
The following processes can be modeled for any number of user-defined water quality constituents:
Water quality pollutant washoff from a given land type occurs during wet weather periods (for example,
during a storm event) and can be described in one of the following methods. Note that buildup is
continuously depleted as washoff proceeds, and washoff ceases when there is no more pollutant
buildup available.
Typical pollutant buildup and washoff parameters are provided in a lookup table within the software.
Washoff loads for a given pollutant and land type can be reduced by a fixed percentage by specifying a
BMP removal efficiency that reflects the effectiveness of any BMP controls associated with the land
type.
Pollutant Treatment
Water quality pollutant treatment and removal is simulated by assigning a treatment function to a node.
A treatment function is defined using a mathematical expression that describes the pollutant reduction.
The mathematical expression can be simple, such as a direct concentration reduction, or sophisticated,
in which various process variables can be analyzed (for example, flow rate into the node, node water
depth, node surface area, hydraulic resident time, and so on).
• Use for master planning, rehabilitation, new design, and include future growth in your sewer
model
• Model looped networks, flow splits, combines, overflows, and storage capacity
• Analyze sanitary or combined sewer systems
• Include manholes, inlets, sewer networks, pumps, lift stations, storage structures, control
structures, force mains, inverted siphons, overflow diversions, relief sewers, and other elements
within a single model
• Construct network sewer models from CAD drawings or GIS geodatabases
• Check CMOM (Capacity, Management, Operation, and Maintenance) capacity requirements for
compliance
• Find and fix sewer bottlenecks, optimize control rules, and help reduce overflow occurrences
• Regulate flow to treatment facilities by determining storage within the sewer system and
designing new storage structures
• Perform CSO and SSO mitigation studies while accounting for RDII (rainfall derived inflows and
infiltration)
The software includes a comprehensive table of typical daily average flows, which can be used to
determine sanitary loadings based on land use and population density.
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