Corato G. 2, Moramarco T. 2, Tucciarelli T. 1 1 Department of Hydraulic Engineering and Environmental Applications, University of Palermo, Italy, Viale.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Flood Profile Modeling with Split Flows and Weirs
Advertisements

3 rd IMPACT WORKSHOP Brembo-Adda test case Fabrizio Savi, University of Rome “La Sapienza”
WinTR-20 Course February Muskingum-Cunge Flood Routing Procedure in NRCS Hydrologic Models Prepared by William Merkel USDA-NRCS National Water Quality.
SECONDARY VALIDATION OF WATER LEVEL DATA (1) PRIMARY VALIDATION: –BASED ON KNOWLEDGE OF INSTRUMENTATION AND METHODS OF MEASUREMENT WITH ASSOCIATED ERRORS.
Total & Specific Energy
CHAPTER FOUR Stream flow measurement
Example: Uniform Flow at Known Q and y
ON WIDTH VARIATIONS IN RIVER MEANDERS Luca Solari 1 & Giovanni Seminara 2 1 Department of Civil Engineering, University of Firenze 2 Department of Environmental.
Streamflow and Runoff The character, amount, and timing of discharge from a basin tells a lot about flow paths within the basin Therefore, important to.
Kinematic Routing Model and its Parameters Definition.
4 th International Symposium on Flood Defence, 6 th – 8 th May 2008, Toronto, Canada Efficiency of distributed flood mitigation measures at watershed scale.
MACRODISPERSION AND DISPERSIVE TRANSPORT BY UNSTEADY RIVER FLOW UNDER UNCERTAIN CONDITIONS M.L. Kavvas and L.Liang UCD J.Amorocho Hydraulics Laboratory.
Pertemuan Open Channel 1. Bina Nusantara.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 13: THE QUASI-STEADY APPROXIMATION.
HEC-RAS US Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center
Stage – Discharge Rating Numerical relationship between water elevation (stage) and discharge at a location in a flowing system. Expressed as an equation,
1 Numerical Hydraulics Numerical solution of the St. Venant equation, FD-method Wolfgang Kinzelbach with Marc Wolf and Cornel Beffa.
HEC-RAS.
Evaluating river cross section for SPRINT: Guadalupe and San Antonio River Basins Alfredo Hijar Flood Forecasting.
An analysis of MLR and NLP for use in river flood routing and comparison with the Muskingum method Mohammad Zare Manfred Koch Dept. of Geotechnology and.
Hydrology and Water Resources RG744 Institute of Space Technology December 11, 2013.
GRADUALLY VARIED FLOW CVE 341 – Water Resources
SPN7 Numerical investigations on the influence of hydraulic boundary conditions on the efficiency of sewer flushing Dr.-Ing. Joerg Schaffner
UNIFORM FLOW AND DESIGN OF CHANNELS
CH 7 - Open Channel Flow Brays Bayou Concrete Channel Uniform & Steady
Introductory lectures in
Hydraulic Routing in Rivers
MEASURING FLUMES By CH. VENKATARAMAIAH.
© Arturo S. Leon, BSU, Spring 2010
1D Steady State Hydraulic Modelling Bratton Stream Case Study.
Feb 2003HEC-RAS Version 3.11 Slides adapted from HEC Unsteady Flow Course Unsteady Flow Course.
Prospects for river discharge and depth estimation through assimilation of swath–altimetry into a raster-based hydraulics model Kostas Andreadis 1, Elizabeth.
Hydraulic Engineering
FLOOD ROUTING.
COMPUTATION OF DISCHARGE DATA GENERAL: –DISCHARGE CANNOT BE MEASURED DIRECTLY AND CONTINUOUSLY –STAGE MEASUREMENTS h(t) ARE MADE CONTINUOUSLY OR AT FIXED.
Channel Routing Simulate the movement of water through a channel
The Islamic University of Gaza Faculty of Engineering Civil Engineering Department Hydraulics - ECIV 3322 Chapter 6 Open Channel.
March 2009WinTR-20 Course1 Muskingum-Cunge Flood Routing Procedure in NRCS Hydrologic Models Prepared by William Merkel USDA-NRCS National Water Quality.
September 16, 2008 R. Edward Beighley Civil, Construction and Environmental Engineering San Diego State University SWOT Hydrology Workshop The Ohio State.
Mathematical Background
MIKE 11 IntroductionNovember 2002Part 1 Introduction to MIKE 11 Part 1 General Hydrodynamics within MIKE 11 –Basic Equations –Flow Types Numerical Scheme.
Hydraulic Routing in Rivers Reference: HEC-RAS Hydraulic Reference Manual, Version 4.1, Chapters 1 and 2 Reading: HEC-RAS Manual pp. 2-1 to 2-12 Applied.
Incorporating sediment-transport capabilities to DSM2
Basic Hydraulics: Channels Analysis and design – I
Surface Water Virtual Mission Dennis P. Lettenmaier, Kostas Andreadis, and Doug Alsdorf Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of.
DEVELOPMENT OF A CELL BASED MODEL FOR STREAM FLOW PREDICTION IN UNGAUGED BASINS USING GIS DATA P B Hunukumbura & S B Weerakoon Department of Civil Engineering,
MRC-MDBC STRATEGIC LIAISON PROGRAM BASIN DEVELOPMENT PLANNING TRAINING MODULE 3 SCENARIO-BASED PLANNING for the MEKONG BASIN Napakuang, Lao PDR 8-11 December.
Basic Hydraulics: Rating curve. Definition & terminology Rating curve, also known as stage–discharge curve, is a graph showing the relation between the.
Hydrology and Water Resources RG744 Institute of Space Technology November 13, 2015.
ERT 246 Hydrology & Water Resources Eng.
Hydro Europe 2016 Team L Influence of the various model parameters (Hec HMS + Mike SHE) 1.
The Measurement of Bed Load Sediment Transport in Rivers and Estuaries using Stationary and Moving ADCP Methods (using workhorse, channel master and stream.
 It is not representative of the whole water flow  High costs of installation and maintenance  It is not uniformly distributed in the world  Inaccessibility.
Amro Elfeki, Hatem Ewea and Nassir Al-Amri Dept. of Hydrology and Water Resources Management, Faculty of Meteorology, Environment & Arid Land Agriculture,
UNIT – III FLOODS Types of floods Following are the various types of floods: 1.Probable Maximum Flood (PMF):This is the flood resulting from the most sever.
Regional to Engineering Scale HUC8 HUC12 Catchment Engineering Hydrology Engineering Hydraulics Personal – a flooded home.
Flow Routing Flow routing is a procedure to determine the time and magnitude of flow (i.e. the flow hydrograph) at a point on a watercourse from known.
FLOODPLAIN REPRESENTATION AND ACCURACY OF PROCESSES 1D/2D
UNIFORM FLOW AND DESIGN OF CHANNELS
Channel Routing Simulate the movement of water through a channel
Basic Hydrology & Hydraulics: DES 601
FLOOD ROUTING Topic 5 River/Stream Routing Muskingum Method.
Channel Routing Simulate the movement of water through a channel
Modelling tools - MIKE11 Part1-Introduction
The Islamic University of Gaza Faculty of Engineering Civil Engineering Department Hydraulics - ECIV 3322 Chapter 6 Open Channel.
Surface Water Virtual Mission
CHAPTER FOUR Stream flow measurement
Floods and Flood Routing
CHAPTER FOUR Stream flow measurement
CHAPTER FOUR Stream flow measurement
Presentation transcript:

Corato G. 2, Moramarco T. 2, Tucciarelli T. 1 1 Department of Hydraulic Engineering and Environmental Applications, University of Palermo, Italy, Viale delle Scienze, 90128, Palermo, Italy 2 Research Institute for Geo-Hydrological Protection, CNR, Via Madonna Alta 126, Perugia, Italy

I. Hydrometric river site with rating curve known III. Equipped River reach with level observations only (Dyrac (Dottori et al., 2009), MAST (Aricò et al., 2009), VPMS (Perumal et al., 2007; 2010) Level observations Negligible lateral flows II. Hydrometric river site with unknown rating curve Jones Formula (Henderson, 1966), Fenton (Fenton, 1999), Marchi (1976) Level observations Stage (m) IV. Equipped river reach with rating curve known at one of ends (Rainfall-runoff modeling, Rating Curve Model) Rating Curve Level observations Significant lateral flows Four possible gauged station configurations for discharge monitoring

III. Equipped River reach with level observations only Level observations Negligible lateral flows In the context of the third configuration, the hydraulic DORA model (Tucciarelli et al. 2000), based on the diffusive hypothesis, can be applied. The model starting from observed stage hydrographs at channel ends, allows there of estimating discharge hydrographs by using a calibration procedure of Manning parameter based on the wave speed of the flood computed through observed stages (Aricò et al. 2009) However the model application, besides the need of topographical data of river sections, was found depending on the Manning’s roughness calibration procedure that affected the model performances

Purposes To address the minimum channel length, L, so that the effects of the downstream boundary condition on the computation of the upstream discharge hydrograph is negligible To propose a new procedure for Manning’s calibration also for a real-time context by exploiting instantaneous flow velocity measurements carried out by radar sensors and using the entropic velocity model

Using hydraulic modelling to optimize Configuration III Q x H x H n AR xTt H                         3/2 1 Diffusive form of Saint Venant Equation:

Boundary conditions or q(0,t) = q u (t) Flow driven Upstream h(0,t) = h u (t)Water level driven Downstream

Problem 1: Wath L? In Configuration III each possible downstream b.c. is an approximation of the physical one We need a reach long enough to avoid a strong estimation error of the discharge in the initial section It’s possible to get a rough estimation of the required length?

1.Large rectangular channel, with constant bed slope 2.Linear variation of water depth in the upstream section Hypothesis Numerical model Syntetic Test

Root hydraulic head gradient at upstream section: Qualitative behaviour

The previous problem can be solved numerically once for ever using dimensionless variables, for the most severe case of initially dry conditions Dimensionless model Dimensionless variables Dimensionless equations

The solution is function of L. The reference solution is computed for L= Error computation

2. from the previous graph, the corresponding value: L A priori estimation of L Relative Error 1. given E d, compute E from the above equation Procedure

In Configuration III the calibration of n is carried out using the stage hydrograph of the downstrem section We need a long enough reach to estimate the wave celerity In present method n can be estimated using a single mean velocity measurement Problem 2: Wath n?

Calibration Manning coefficent was determined minimizing the follow objective function: where q comp (t cal,n) is the computed discharge at the instant t cal in which measurement is carried out, while q obs is the observed discharge.

To develop a practical and simple method for estimating discharge during high floods, Moramarco et al. (JHE, 2004) derived from the entropy formulation proposed by Chiu an equation applicable to each sampled vertical: Entropic Method If the measurement is carried out in the upper part of the flow area, u maxv is sampled for each vertical. Anyway, to drastically reduce the sampling period it is possible to consider only the upper portion where u max typically occurs and assuming that the behaviour of the maximum velocity in the cross-sectional flow area can be represented through a parabolic or elliptical curve. Gauged site: M estimated through the recorded pairs of (u m, u max ) Problem 2: Estimatimation of calibration discharge

measuredellipticalparabolic Entropic Method Problem 2: Estimatimation of calibration discharge

Gauged Section: M.te Molino (Tiber River) – 28/11/05 ore 11:30 a) b) c) d)

Eventq pM [m 3 /s]t ph [h]h pM [m]Duration [h] December April November February December November Eventq pM [m 3 /s]t pq [h]h pM [m]Duration [h] November December Study Area: Upper Tiber Basin Pierantonio (1805 km 2 ) Ponte Nuovo (4135 km 2 )

Test case 1: Pierantonio Mean bed slope i = 1.6x10 -3 Typical Manning = sm -1/3 (observed during Nov. 05) L estimation

Test case 1: Pierantonio EventQ max Error [%] December April November February December November

Test case 1: Pierantonio Discharge Estimation Results Cal. Time [h] Man [sm -1/3 ] Q max err [%] Cal. Time [h] Man [sm -1/3 ] Q max err [%]

Test case 2: Ponte Nuovo Mean bed slope i = 0.85x10 -3 Typical Tiber Manning = sm -1/3 (observed during Nov. 05) L estimation

Test case 2: Ponte Nuovo Cal. Time [h] Man [sm -1/3 ] Q max err [%] Cal. Time [h] Man [sm -1/3 ] Q max err [%] Discharge Estimation Results

Conclusions The effect of downstream boundary condition over the upstream stage hydrograph computation has shown that short channel lengths are enough to achieve good performance of the diffusive hydraulic model The coupling of the hydraulic model with the entropic velocity model turned out of great support for an accurate calibration of Manning’s coefficient The developed algorithm can be conveniently adopted for the rating curve assessment at ungauged sites where the standard techniques for velocity measurements fail, in particular during high floods Based on the proposed procedure, discharge hydrographs can be assessed in real-time for whatever flood condition.