Rain Water Harvesting System

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 23

Save Water

How?

The concept is simple :

 Collect

 Store and use

 Recharge
 Population increase
 Industrialization
 Urbanization
(a) Increase in per capita utilization
(b) Less peculation area
 In places where rain fed/ irrigation based
crops are cultivated through ground water
 Decrease in surface area of Lakes, Ponds,
Tanks etc.
 Deforestation
(i) Less precipitation
(ii) Absence of Barriers
(a) Rain drops checked by leaves of tree
(b) Water slowly descends through twigs & trunk
© Humus – acts as reservoir
(d) Tiny creatures – helps percolation

1 hectare of forest-6-7 Lac ton of water


(after filtering)
2 top layer can hold 1.2 Lac tons of water
4
 Rain water is the ultimate source of fresh
water
 Potential of rain to meet water demand is
tremendous
 Rain water harvesting helps to overcome
water scarcity
 To conserve ground water the aquifers must
be recharged with rain water
 Rain water harvesting is the ultimate answer
 To conserve & augment the storage of
ground water
 To reduce water table depletion
 To improve the quality of ground water
 To arrest sea water intrusion in coastal areas
 To avoid flood & water stagnation in urban
areas
 It is the activity of direct collection of rain
water
 Rain water can be stored for direct use or can
be recharged into the ground water aquifer.
Rainwater storage reservoir at Dholavira (Rann of Kutch) – Harappan civilization
(2500-1900 BC)
 Roof catchment
 Gutters
 Down pipe & first flushing pipe
 Filter Unit
 Storage Tank
Collection (Catchment)
Flat / sloping roofs Transportation: Down pipes

Leaf and grit


filter, First flush
device

Recharge into open wells / bore Storage in


wells / percolation pits / trenches tanks
 The roof of the house is used as the
catchment for collecting rain water.
 The construction and material of the roof
effect its suitability as a catchment
 Roofs made of corrugated iron sheet,
asbestos sheet, Tiles or Concrete can be
utilized for harvesting the rain water.
 Gutters are channels fixed to the edges of
roof all around to collect & transport the
rainwater from the roof.
 Gutters can be made in semi-circular and
rectangular shape with cement pipe, plain
galvanized iron sheet, PVC pipes, bamboos
etc.
 Use of locally available material reduce the
overall cost of the system.
 It is the pipe which carries the rainwater from
the gutters to the filter & storage tank.
 Down pipe is joined with the gutters at one
end & the other end is connected to the filter
unit of the storage tank.
 PVC or GI pipe of 50 mm to 75 mm (2-3”) are
commonly used for down pipe. Bamboo can
be also used wherever available and possible.
 Debris, dust & dirt collect on the roof during
non rainy periods when the first rain arrive. A
first flush system arrangement is made to
avoid the entering unwanted material into
the Filter Media & Storage Tank.
 This is a simple manually operated
arrangement or semi-automatic system with
a valve below the ‘T’ junction.
 The filter unit is a container or chamber filled
with filter media such as coarse sand,
charcoal, coconut fiber, pebbles & gravels to
remove the debris & dirt from water that
enters the tank.
 The filter unit is placed over the storage tank
or separately.
 It may be of Ferro cement filter unit,
Aluminum, Cement Rings or Plastic Bucket
etc.
 It is used to store the water that is collected from
the roof through filter.
 For small scale water storage plastic buckets, jerry
cans, clay or cement jars, ceramic jars, drums may
be used.
 For larger quantities of water, the system will
require a bigger tank with cylindrical or rectangular
or square in shape constructed with Ferro cement or
cement rings or plain cement concrete or reinforced
cement concrete or brick or stone etc.
 The storage tank is provided with a cover on
the top to avoid the contamination of water
from external sources.
 The storage tank is provided with pipe
fixtures at appropriate places to draw the
water to clean the tank & to dispose of extra
water. A provision for keeping the vessel to
collect the water is to be made.
 Based on
 No. of person in the House hold
 Per capita water requirement
 No. of days for which water is required
Example :
Drinking water requirement for a household with 5
family members, period of 8 months (30×8=240)
& 6 lpcd
= 5x 240x 6
= 7200 Liters
= Annual rainfall (in mm) x roof area (in sq.m) x co-efficient
of run off for roof
co-efficient of run off :
1) GI sheet - 0.9
2) Asbestos - 0.8
3) Tiled - 0.75
4) Plaster on bricks/Concrete - 0.7
Example : If Annual rainfall is 800 mm & roof area is 20 sq.
m and co-efficient of run off for roof is 0.8 (As for
Asbestos)
Then,
Water available from roof top = 800 mm × 20 sq.m × 0.8
=12800 Liters per annum
Size of Tank = 1.2 m dia
& 1.8 m height
No. of Tanks =4
Volume of Tank = (3.14x1.2x1.2x1.8)/4
= 2.03 cum
= 2000 liters (approx)
Volume of of 4 tanks = 4x2000
= 8000 Liters (approx)
(this can be designed as per requirement)
Size of Tank = 1.2 m dia
& 1.8 m height
No. of Tanks =4
Volume of Tank = (3.14x1.2x1.2x1.8)/4
= 2.03 cum
= 2000 liters (approx)
Volume of of 4 tanks = 4x2000
= 8000 Liters (approx)
(this can be designed as per requirement)
Thank You

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy