Lecture 15u Flood Routing 1
Lecture 15u Flood Routing 1
Lecture 15u Flood Routing 1
DEMO
Lag due to
travel time
and filling
of reservoir
I (cfs)
500
3500
9000
9750
8000
4500
2250
1250
250
0
0
0
0
0
Q(cfs)
250
1000
3000
4500
5750
6000
5250
4250
3250
2500
1500
1000
750
0
S/t (cfs)
250
2500
6000
5250
2250
-1500
-3000
-3000
-3000
-2500
-1500
-1000
-750
0
River Routing
Rivers store water on their floodplains.
Because the area is so large compared
to the channel, floodplain velocities are
much slower than channel flows, Q = VA.
Building on floodplains defeats their
natural purpose as flood control devices,
and ultimately requires expensive flood
control projects to prevent flood losses.
House
Corps of Engineers Project
with your tax dollars
River Routing
For natural rivers the attenuation
process is more complex than for
reservoirs with dams. Take, for
example, the 1993 Upper Mississippi
floods. We know that great portions
of the Upper Mississippi valley were
flooded, yet by the time the flood
arrived at New Orleans, it wasnt as
bad as in Iowa. Why is that?
River Routing
Its because of storage within the river
system itself. When flow is rising, theres a
parcel of storage within the *reach between
inflow and outflow, slowed because of
friction and large cross sectional area when
the floodplain gets some of the water.
Suppose, for example, we have gauges
both upstream (station 1) , and
downstream(station 2). Both have
floodplains that store water. We could write
a water balance equation with averages:
Flood arrives
at reach
Entire reach
flooded
Storm over,
inflow slows,
higher water
in lower reach
Muskingum Method
The Muskingum method uses the basic
hydrologic continuity equation with averages
we just saw:
and a storage term that depends both on the
inflow and outflow:
where x is a weighting factor between 0 and
0.5 that says something about how inflow
and outflow vary within a given reach, and K
is the travel time of the flood wave.
Muskingum Method
Our storage discharge equation is
written in a finite difference form:
The Muskingum routing procedure
itself uses this form combined with
in the form
To produce the Muskingum outflow
equation
In General
Estimating K and x
An Example
As usual we will have an example, and you
do a similar problem for homework.