Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323)

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Presentation transcript:

Engineering Hydrology (ECIV 4323) Chapter 1: Introduction Instructors: Dr. Yunes Mogheir Dr. Ramadan Al Khatib

1.1 Introduction - Hydrology is the science of water: It is the science that deals with the occurrence, circulation, and distribution of water of the earth and earth’s atmosphere. It is concerned with water in streams and lakes, rainfall and snowfall, snow and ice on the land, and groundwater. It is of inter-disciplinary nature.

… 1.1 Introduction In general, hydrology deals with Estimation of water resources. The study of processes such as precipitation, runoff, evapotranspiration and their interaction. The study of problems such as floods and droughts and strategies to combat them.

1.2. Hydrologic Cycle

- Hydrologic Cycle Processes Atmospheric water Precipitation Evaporation Infiltration Surface Runoff Groundwater Recharge (Percolation) Baseflow Land Surface Surface Water Soil water Groundwater System

Catchment Area or Watershed? 1.3. Water Budget Catchment Area or Watershed? Catchment area or drainage basin or river basin or watershed is defined as: The area drained by a stream or a system of connecting streams such that the surface runoff originating in this area leaves the area in concentrated flow through a single outlet. Stream Outlet A Or Station A Catchment boundary or watershed or divide for the site At A Stream Outlet B Catchment boundary for the site At B Tributary

Water budget equation System Concept Vi – V0 =  S Hydrologic analysis for various applications and models begins with the system concept. SYSTEM OPERATORS INPUTS OUTPUTS System Boundary Vi – V0 =  S I - Q =  S/ t (change in storage with respect to time) I = inflow volume per unit time Q = outflow per unit time

Typical Water Budget System Components P = precipitation E = evaporation T = transpiration R = Surface runoff G = net groundwater flow  S = change in storage P - R - G - E - T =  S - Example 1.1 and 1.2

1.4. World Water Balance Oceans 96.5 % of total Saline water on land 1% of total Fresh: 2.5 % of total Groundwater 30.1 % of fresh water Polar Ice 68.6 % of fresh water Lakes & Rivers 0.266 % of fresh water Check tables 1.1 and table 1.2 in your text book

Global Water Balance (Table 1.2 in textbook) Global Average Precipitation (per year): Ocean (70.8 %) and Land (29.2%) 127 cm x 0.708 + 80 cm x 0.292 = 113.2 cm/yr Global Average Evaporation (per year): 140 cm x 0.708 + 48.4 x 0.292 = 113.2 cm/yr

1.6. Application in Engineering ►We need hydrology in the design and operation of water resources engineering projects such as those for irrigation, water supply, flood control, water power and navigation. More specific examples: The capacity of storage structures such as reservoirs The magnitude of flood flows to enable safe disposal of excess flow Floodplain analysis and delineation The minimum flow and quantity of flow available at various seasons Erosion and sediment control The interaction of the flood wave and hydraulic structures, such as levees, reservoirs, and bridges ►The hydrologic study should of necessity precede structural and other detailed design studies.

1.7. Sources of Data The data normally required: Weather records ( temperature, humidity, wind velocity) Precipitation data Stream-flow records Evaporation and transpiration data Infiltration characteristics of the area Groundwater characteristics Physical and geological characteristics

Assignments for Chapter 1 Solve the following problems: - 1.3 - 1.5