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Can a rural hand pump tell you it’s not well?

Predictive health monitoring is widely used in engineering applications to detect damage to infrastructure as early as possible. Forecasting failure rather than merely detecting failure once it occurs helps to reduce the downtime of systems, and, ideally, performing predictive maintenance to avoid downtime completely. With this approach already widely used in many fields from commercial and military jet engines to patient monitoring in health systems, it can directly be extended to monitoring the condition of hand pumps in rural villages.

The hand pump remains a reliable and low-cost method to access groundwater, making it a critical component of rural water supply for 200 million people in sub-Saharan Africa. Community hand pumps, such as the Afridev and India MK II, are designed to lift water from deeper sources than traditional rope and bucket systems which can only be used in shallow wells. High water demands, however, result in continuous usage and frequent breakdowns. Unfortunately, practical challenges in the supply of spare parts combined with a lack in local skills and resources result in an estimated 30 per cent of hand  pumps in Africa not working at any given time.1.

can force women or girls to walk up to 20 kilometres to find alternative sources

Therefore, the use of predictive maintenance in hand pumps has the potential to limit interruptions of weeks or more which are common across rural Africa. A broken hand pump in a remote village can force women or girls to walk up to 20 kilometres to find alternative sources which may be contaminated or expensive. Reliability and sustainability of water supplies are important to ensure healthy communities, societies, and economies in all regions of the world.

The Oxford university ‘smart hand pump’ was successfully introduced in 2012. Proof-of-concept for the remote monitoring of hand pumps used a simple microprocessor, accelerometer and global system for mobile communications (GSM) components. The Smart Hand pumps provide hourly data related to usage, which in turn provides insights into more nuanced water use patterns.

In 2014, a preliminary analysis 2. used high frequency accelerometer data to show that these patterns contain useful information. High-rate waveforms from the accelerometry data can be processed using robust machine learning methods that are sensitive not only to the dynamics of the whole system but also the subtle interaction between the user and the pump. The small changes in pump dynamics and the subtle reactions of the user become a prominent signal in determining the deterioration of pump mechanics and imminent failure. This same signal can also be used to for shallow aquifer monitoring at the pump.

By retrofitting a simple and inexpensive device to a standard pump handle the smart hand pumps are able to pro-actively monitor the condition of hand pumps and ensure that millions of people can have access to a reliable water source.

We recorded 103 different users extracting approximately 5059 litres of groundwater using the hand pumps.

In February 2016, we visited 33 different handpumps across the Kwale County in southeast Kenya. We recorded 103 different users extracting approximately 5059 litres of groundwater using the hand pumps. These data will be used to produce a low-cost predictive maintenance system that is scalable across large rural regions. The development of a prototype hardware system is being supported by UNICEF, funded through a competitive tender process, as part of their Product Innovation portfolio.  Field testing will be conducted in partnership with UNICEF country programmes in Eastern and Southern Africa.

By monitoring the heartbeat of thousands of hand pumps across sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia it is possible to ensure that millions of people can have access to a reliable and secure water network. The hand pump network has existed for many years and despite being neglected remains the most reliable method to access groundwater in remote locations as the world advances to achieving universal drinking water security.

Take a look at the video to see our work in Kwale County in Kenya in action.

 

References:

  1. http://www.rural-water-supply.net/en/resources/details/206
  2. http://www.robots.ox.ac.uk/~davidc/pubs/aht2014_water.pdf

Blog by Principal Investigator Dr. Rob Hope

Briefing Note based on SIWI World Water Week poster presentation by Patrick Thomson

Latest posts by Heloise Greeff (see all)
Heloise Greeff: Heloise Greeff, Doctoral Researcher, Water Programme, Computational Health Informatics Lab and Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford
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