Drain failure
Introduction
Drainage[1] is the natural or artificial removal of surface water and groundwater from an area with excess water. The internal drainage of most agricultural soils is good enough to prevent severe waterlogging (anaerobic conditions that damage root growth), but many soils need artificial drainage to improve production or to manage water supplies. In engineering and urban planning, it is the system of pipes, drains or traps, with their connections, that allows the evacuation of liquids, generally stormwater, from a population.
Types of drainage
Sanitary drainage
The drain that transports liquid waste from non-polluting homes, businesses and factories is called sanitary toilet drainage. In some cities they are directed to treatment plants for treatment and subsequent discharge into a channel that allows the water to continue the hydrological cycle.
Storm drainage
This name is known as the drainage system that conveys rainwater to places where its use is organized.
In many locations, the differentiation between sanitary and storm drainage is not made and all the collected material is concentrated to the same destination, causing all types of waste to come together.
Operation
The drainage works thanks to gravity. The pipes are connected at a descending angle, from the interior of the properties to the municipal network, from the center of the community to the outside of it. Vertical manholes are drilled every few distances to allow access to the network for maintenance purposes.
In the case of storm drainage, culverts are established on the street pavement, connected directly to the main pipe, to capture rainwater.
History
Traces of drainage systems have been found in civilizations as ancient as those of the Indus Valley; However, these were superficial and not underground.