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Hydrographs and Run Off

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14 views

Hydrographs and Run Off

Uploaded by

Nakkai Melisha
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HYDROGRAPHS AND RUNOFF

By
G. A. Mavima
Faculty of Agricultural Sciences
Department of Agricultural
Engineering
Learning objectives

• RUNOFF
• Catchment characteristics
• Runoff hydrographs
• Implications on water availability
• Implications on catchment management
Catchment definition

 Using the concept that “water runs downhill”, a


catchment is defined by all points enclosed within an
area from which rain falling at these points will
contribute water to the outlet.
RUNOFF

 RUNOFF from a given catchment is defined as surface water


discharge over time.

 The relationship between discharge over time is expressed in a


graph called a hydrograph

CATCHMENT CHARACTERISTICS AND RUNOFF

 Catchment characteristics govern the relationship between


rainfall and resultant runoff or runoff hydrograph.
RUNOFF

Catchment characteristics can be grouped into 2 categories

 TOPOGRAPHIC – areas, slopes, shapes, drainage patterns,


land use, land properties, channel properties, drainage slopes,
depression areas, etc.

 INFILTRATION – influences amount of ppt absorbed into soils


and what runs off.
RUNOFF
- Runoff from a given catchment is influenced by:

- Soil type and land cover

- Slope and travel time

- Hydraulic radius

- Roughness co-efficient

- Channel storage and length

- Impervious area

- Infiltration capacity
CATCHMENT CHARACTERISTICS
AREA
- The catchment can be subdivided into the pervious and impervious
area. The pervious area allows for water infiltration while the
impervious area does not.

- Precipitation which falls on an impervious area will be stored, or will


fall directly to the watershed outlet.
CATCHMENT CHARACTERISTICS
DRAINAGE SYSTEM AND
LAND COVER
- After initial abstraction, water
flows over land to a natural
or man-made drainage
system.

- The system’s slope, hydraulic


roughness, channel storage
or length, impervious area,
infiltration capacity, and the
catchment shape affect the
discharge hydrograph
shape’s.
CATCHMENT CHARACTERISTICS
DRAINAGE SYSTEM AND
LAND COVER

- The greater the slope, the less


the time it takes for water to
flow to a discharge point.

- The rising limbs of


hydrographs for directly
drained watersheds is
steeper than that for
watersheds with storage.
CATCHMENT CHARACTERISTICS
AREA STORM COVERAGE

-The area coverage of a storm on a watershed also affects the


hydrograph shape.

- The location of the localised storm will affect the time of


occurrence of the peak discharge.

- A rainfall event near the outlet of the catchment will result in a


peak near the start of the storm and rapid passage of the
streamflow while rainfall in remote portions of the catchment
will result in the runoff at the outlet being spread out over a
long time period. The peak will occur later in time and will be
lower.
TIME OF CONCENTRATION
- The time of concentration is the longest travel time it takes a
particle of water to reach a discharge point in the catchment.

- There are three common ways that waters are transported:


overland flow, pipe flow (storm sewer), and channel flow.
Each method has a separate formula for estimating time of
concentration.

INFILTRATION
- It is the rate of entry of water into the ground. The rate and
quantity of water which infiltrates is a function of the soil
type, soil moisture, soil permeability, groundcover, drainage
conditions, depth of water table, and intensity and volume of
precipitation.
RUNOFF
The simplest model of runoff is the RATIONAL EQUATION:

Q  CIA
 Q = Runoff rate, C = Rational Coefficient, A = Catchment Area, I =
Intensity of rainfall

 Runoff is modelled with only two characteristics, the Rational


Coefficient C and catchment area A.

 Influences of such factors as infiltration and depression storage are


incorporated into values of C
RUNOFF

-The following MASS BALANCE equation is useful in estimating total


runoff resulting from a defined ppt event over a defined catchment.

Q=P-E-Qgw+D S
Where:
P = Total volume of ppt
Q = Total volume of rainfall excess (Runoff)
E = Total volume of evapotranspiration
Qgw = Total volume of infiltration/deep groundwater recharge
∆S= Total volume of abstraction (Surface storage)

- All these parameters are expressed in DEPTH units (inches,


centimetres, millimetres) and are independent of area.

- When area is brought in this results in VOLUME


Water balance
Rainfall P Evapotranspiration E

Storage S

Deep Runoff Q
groundwater
recharge Qgw

Q=P-E-Qgw+D S
HYDROGRAPH
- A HYDROGRAPH is a graph of FLOW RATE vs TIME for a specific
conduit

- Its shape results from rainfall rates and watershed conditions


Runoff hydrograph
HYDROGRAPH

- A STREAMFLOW HYDROGRAPH is composed of both SURFACE


RUNOFF and GROUNDWATER infiltrating into a stream.
HYDROGRAPH

- Groundwater flow has two components that are:

INTERFLOW – flow from groundwater areas close to the stream and


flow for shorter periods of time.

BASEFLOW – constant flow over longer time periods


HYDROGRAPH
HYDROGRAPH PROPERTIES
- Rising limb or concentration curve

- Crest segment of peak discharge

- Recession curve or falling limb

NB. RAINFALL EXCESS = Effective rainfall volume = Runoff volume


under the runoff hydrograph
HYDROGRAPH PROPERTIES
LAG TIME (L): The time interval from the centre of mass of the rainfall
excess to the peak of the resulting hydrograph

TIME TO PEAK (tp): The time interval from the start of rainfall excess to
the peak of the resulting hydrograph
HYDROGRAPH PROPERTIES

TIME OF CONCENTRATION (tc): The time from the end of rainfall excess
to the inflection point (change of slope) on the recession curve. Also
the longest time for water to flow to a discharge point from any point
in the catchment.

TIME BASE (tb): Time from the beginning to the end of surface runoff
HYDROGRAPH RECORDS
- Discharge records are normally reported as daily flow rates.

- Flow rate is measured at specified time intervals

- For rainfall excess passing from a catchment in less than a day, the
hydrograph time must be in hours or minutes

- Mean (arithmetic average) daily discharge represents flow from


midnight to midnight over a 24-hr period.

- Flow rate measurements are a useful aid in predicting peak flow rates
and volume discharges
CATCHMENT CHARACTERISTICS
DRAINAGE SYSTEM AND
LAND COVER
- After initial abstraction, water
flows over land to a natural
or man-made drainage
system.

- The system’s slope, hydraulic


roughness, channel storage
or length, impervious area,
infiltration capacity, and the
catchment shape affect the
discharge hydrograph
shape’s.
DISCHARGE HYDROGRAPH

STREAM CONFIGURATION
- The type and density of the
drainage system will have an
influence on the shape of the
hydrograph at the outlet.

- Dendritic system
- Trellis system
- Radial system
- Multi basin system
- Meandering system
- Braided system
- Anabranching system
- Reticulating system
ANNUAL HYDROGRAPHS
PERENNIAL STREAMS
- Rarely have zero flow volumes
- Have relatively long recession times
- Have dependable water yield potentials during the year. Water yield is
sustained by groundwater influent to the stream
- Groundwater table is always maintained above the bottom of the stream
ANNUAL HYDROGRAPHS
INTERMITTENT STREAMS
- Have limited groundwater storage and release water at faster rates.
- Have shorter recession times and discharges fall to zero during
extended dry periods.
- Baseflow and interflow ONLY exists during and just after a heavy
rainfall period
- Water yield is primarily based on surface runoff
ANNUAL HYDROGRAPHS
EPHEMERAL STREAMS
- In areas where the bed and side walls of a drainage channel are
dominated by impervious soils, the streams have neither baseflow nor
interflow
- Groundwater table is always below the stream’s bottom
- In the event of river runoff, the stream actually recharges the
groundwater from the stream bed.
- This stream type is not dependant on water yields
Applications of hydrograph theory

The study of hydrographs helps us to know

 The maximum probable flood that may occur at a given


site; this is required for the safe design of drains, bridges
and culverts, dams and reservoirs, channels and other
flood control structures

 The water yield from a basin; this is necessary for the


design of dams, municipal water supply, water power, river
navigation etc.
Thank you

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