Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Distributed Flow Routing
Reading: Sections 9.1 – 9.4,
2
Distributed Flow routing in channels
Distributed Routing St. Venant equations Continuity equation Momentum Equation What are all these terms, and where are they coming from?
3
Assumptions for St. Venant Equations
Flow is one-dimensional Hydrostatic pressure prevails and vertical accelerations are negligible Streamline curvature is small. Bottom slope of the channel is small. Manning’s equation is used to describe resistance effects The fluid is incompressible
4
Reynolds transport theorem
Continuity Equation Q = inflow to the control volume q = lateral inflow Rate of change of flow with distance Outflow from the C.V. Change in mass Elevation View Reynolds transport theorem Plan View
5
Continuity Equation (2)
Conservation form Non-conservation form (velocity is dependent variable)
6
Momentum Equation From Newton’s 2nd Law:
Net force = time rate of change of momentum Sum of forces on the C.V. Momentum stored within the C.V Momentum flow across the C. S.
7
Forces acting on the C.V. Fg = Gravity force due to weight of water in the C.V. Ff = friction force due to shear stress along the bottom and sides of the C.V. Fe = contraction/expansion force due to abrupt changes in the channel cross-section Fw = wind shear force due to frictional resistance of wind at the water surface Fp = unbalanced pressure forces due to hydrostatic forces on the left and right hand side of the C.V. and pressure force exerted by banks Elevation View Plan View
8
Momentum Equation Sum of forces on the C.V.
Momentum stored within the C.V Momentum flow across the C. S.
9
Momentum Equation(2) Local acceleration term
Convective acceleration term Pressure force term Gravity force term Friction force term Kinematic Wave Diffusion Wave Dynamic Wave
10
Momentum Equation (3) Steady, uniform flow Steady, non-uniform flow
Unsteady, non-uniform flow
11
Dynamic Wave Routing Flow in natural channels is unsteady, non-uniform with junctions, tributaries, variable cross-sections, variable resistances, variable depths, etc etc.
12
Obtaining river cross-sections
Traditional methods Depth sounder and GPS Cross-sections are also extracted from a contour map, DEM, and TIN
13
Triangulated Irregular Network
Edge Node Face
14
3D Structure of a TIN
15
Real TIN in 3D!
16
TIN for UT campus
17
TIN as a source of cross-sections
18
CrossSections
19
Channel and Cross-Section
Direction of Flow Cross-Section Channel
20
HEC GeoRAS A set of ArcGIS tools for processing of geospatial data for
Export of geometry HEC-RAS Import of HEC-RAS output for display in GIS Available from HEC at
21
Hydraulic Modeling with Geo-RAS
GIS data HEC-RAS Geometry HEC-RAS Flood Profiles Flood display in GIS
22
Solving St. Venant equations
Analytical Solved by integrating partial differential equations Applicable to only a few special simple cases of kinematic waves Numerical Finite difference approximation Calculations are performed on a grid placed over the (x,t) plane Flow and water surface elevation are obtained for incremental time and distances along the channel x-t plane for finite differences calculations
23
Finite Difference Approximations
Explicit Implicit Temporal derivative Temporal derivative Spatial derivative Spatial derivative Spatial derivative is written using terms on known time line Spatial and temporal derivatives use unknown time lines for computation
24
Example
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.