Utilizing Rainwater Harvesting System for Water Scarcity at a Double-Story Residential House
-
Published:2023-10-03
Issue:6
Volume:31
Page:2961-2972
-
ISSN:2231-8526
-
Container-title:Pertanika Journal of Science and Technology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:JST
Author:
Rosli Muhammad Izzuddin,Abdullah Sharifah,Mohd Noor Nur Asmaliza
Abstract
The use of rainwater is widely recognized as a dependable solution to reduce and mitigate the effects of water scarcity. Research on rainwater harvesting systems has increased significantly in recent years, especially on methods and treatment systems. A rainwater harvesting system can be described as collecting and storing rainwater that can be used rather than waste as runoff. A rainwater collection system might lessen the reliance on the public water supply. This study aims to determine the suitability of a rainwater harvesting system at a double-story house, thus identifying the suitable tank size for installation. This study’s analysis used the Tangki NAHRIM 2.0 with localized input data such as rainfall, suitable roof area, and roof runoff coefficient. Findings from this study indicate that installing the rainwater harvesting system at a double-story house is suitable, and the optimum tank size is 3m3 by considering all the activities that contribute to water usage. Concisely, installing a rainwater harvesting system can reduce the monthly water bill and minimize the usage of treated water, thus preventing water scarcity in the future.
Publisher
Universiti Putra Malaysia
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Reference21 articles.
1. Allen, J., & Haarhoff, J. (2015). A proposal for the probabilistic sizing of rainwater tanks for constant demand. Journal of the South African Institution of Civil Engineering, 57(2), 22-27. https://doi.org/10.17159/23098775/2015/v57n2a3 2. Bakar, M. A. A., Ariff, N. M., Jemain, A. A., & Nadzir, M. S. M. (2020). Cluster analysis of hourly rainfalls using storm indices in Peninsular Malaysia. Journal of Hydrologic Engineering, 25(7), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0001942 3. Boretti, A., & Rosa, L. (2019). Water demand by 2050. Reassessing the Projections of the World Water Development Report. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41545-019-0039-9 4. Campisano, A., Butler, D., Ward, S., Burns, M. J., Friedler, E., DeBusk, K., Fisher-Jeffes, L. N., Ghisi, E., Rahman, A., Furumai, H., & Han, M. (2017). Urban rainwater harvesting systems: research, implementation and future perspectives. Water Research, 115, 195-209. 5. Chang, W., Cheng, J., Allaire, J. J., Xie, Y., & McPherson, J. (2019). Shiny: Web Application Framework for R. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=shiny
|
|