Media Release
August 9 2006
Rapid roof drainage sucks rainwater into one downpipe
A siphonic roof drainage system that discharges water from large
buildings at more than five times the rate of current drainage systems
is putting University of South Australia researchers at the forefront of
this technology worldwide.
Most downpipe systems have a very inefficient way of discharging water
from roofs because water spirals down around the inner edges or walls of
the downpipes in what is called annular flow (in the form of a ring),
according to UniSA’s Professor of Sustainable Water Resources
Engineering, Simon Beecham.
“At no time does the water ever exceed a third of the capacity of the
downpipes,” Prof Beecham said. “The reason is that the downpipes are
discharging two-thirds air and one-third water.
“Siphonic roof drainage works very differently. Rather than letting the
water fall under gravity, which is what happens with traditional
downpipes, it sucks the water off the roof at velocities up to seven
metres per second. This means that instead of having downpipes every ten
metres or so along the sides of large buildings, the water can be piped
horizontally at roof level to almost any point in the building before
being brought down to a single collection pipe at ground level,” Prof
Beecham said.
“With gravity flow the water quickly reaches a maximum velocity that it
can’t exceed (about two metres per second). Also, there is so much air
in the vertical downpipes that many are needed to discharge the volume
of air and water from buildings. Siphonic drainage replaces these
downpipes with a single large pipe full of water that discharges at a
very high flow rate.
“The siphonic system works like a domestic water supply. A lot of
pressure or ‘head’ that has been built into the water supply system
drives the flow of water out whenever a tap is turned on in any part of
the house.”
The system self primes (to exclude air), which creates an operating head
that sucks the water to any point in the building. Priming is achieved
by placing a metal baffle just above the outlet to restrict air intake.
Excluding air makes the flow more efficient because pressurised water
flow can be generated.
“Priming can easily be explained by emptying a bath of water. When the
plug is released, you can see a spiralling air core going down the
drain. If you place your hand over that air core above the outlet, the
spiralling disappears and the bath empties much quicker because full
flow conditions have been initiated,” Prof Beecham said.
The design of siphonic drainage systems involves complex hydraulic
analysis and Prof Beecham is the author of the software, called the
Syfon program, which is now the most widely used software for siphonic
roof drainage systems in Australia.
This revolutionary technology is employed at the Telstra Stadium in
Sydney and at the Sydney, Hong Kong and the new Adelaide international
airport terminal buildings. All of these buildings are characterised by
elegant architectural form, largely because the architects have not had
to deal with a multitude of downpipes.
Siphonic hydraulic drainage utilises the height of a building by
converting that height into potential energy to drive the flow of water.
It’s a sophisticated system that needs to be very carefully engineered
by highly qualified hydraulic specialists with years of training.
The system is not designed for domestic use. It can only be used on
significant roof structures because of the extremely complex hydraulics
involved.
In addition to writing the Syfon program, Prof Beecham is chair of the
Standards Australia committee charged with developing one of the world’s
first standards on siphonic roof drainage.
“This involves research to increase our understanding of the very
complex hydraulics involved in siphonic systems and UniSA is heavily
engaged with that process. We have a strong working relationship with
the largest manufacturer of this technology, Syfon Systems, which is
co-funding our research at UniSA,” he said.
Prof Beecham is also the author of SWITCH and Switch2 water sensitive
urban design software packages, which are recommended in Engineers
Australia’s Australian Runoff Quality Manual.
Contact for interviews
- Prof Simon Beecham office (08) 8302 5141 email simon.beecham@unisa.edu.au
Media contact
-
Geraldine Hinter office (08) 8302 0963 mobile 0417 861 832
email geraldine.hinter@unisa.edu.au
