Karol Dykiert

1paper

1 Paper

2.5CEApr 14
The Elusive Nature of Roughness: Linking Hydraulics and Graph Theory for Water Distribution Networks Model Calibration

Karol Dykiert, Mateusz Stolarski, Michał Czuba et al.

Accurate pipe roughness estimation in large-scale water distribution networks is often hindered by the high cost of traditional field methods. This study investigates whether network partitioning, by utilizing hydraulic and graph-derived attributes, can enhance the calibration of these parameters. Using a high-fidelity model of a real network as a benchmark, we evaluate density-based clustering, and topology-driven grouping strategies. Optimization experiments demonstrate that attribute-based grouping yields stable, repeatable results comparable to manual calibration for hydraulically significant pipes. While hydraulic attributes generate more distinct cluster structures, the inclusion of graph-based data improves calibration robustness by stabilizing the optimization process. Notably, density-based clustering achieves similar accuracy to k-means while reducing computational effort in specific configurations. Although the method does not eliminate all sources of uncertainty, results suggest that topology-informed grouping provides a systematic, reproducible, and computationally efficient alternative to manual heuristics, highlighting the critical role of network structure in reliable parameter estimation.