1.3. Conveyance

50
Part B1: Basics B1.3 Water conveyance

description

ppt

Transcript of 1.3. Conveyance

Page 1: 1.3. Conveyance

Part B1: Basics

B1.3 Water conveyance

Page 2: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3 Water conveyanceTopics

• Inlet arrangements– Diversion structures, settling, dealing with

flood

• Water transport– Limitations of canals

• Getting around obstacles– Flumes, culverts, syphons, Inverted

syphons,

Page 3: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3 Water conveyanceConveyance arrangements

Page 4: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Inlet arrangements: Considerations

• How much of the flow to divert– Total flow needs weirs which are expensive

and may cause problems– Some fraction may be cheaper

• Dealing with abnormal flow– Drought (low flow) – lack of performance

(may not work at all)– Flood (high flow) – things break!!!!

• Dealing with sediment

• Blocking of the inlet

Page 5: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: siting

Page 6: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: siting

Page 7: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: siting

Page 8: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes

Direct Inlet Side Inlet

Page 9: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes:Gabions

Page 10: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Direct inlet

Page 11: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Side inlet

Page 12: 1.3. Conveyance

Direct Side

• Better transport of silt into the headrace

• More difficult to construct

• Needs special grill to self clean

• Easier to construct

• Self cleaning

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Pros and cons

Page 13: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Grilles

Sloped grille for direct inlet

Plain grille for side inlet

Page 14: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Stream bed

Page 15: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Rate of inlet

Normal water level (hr)

Headrace water level (hh)

weir crestover-top

1 22d r hQ AC g h h

Cd = 0.6-0.8

2

2net

vh

gFrom Bernoulli

Intake area (A)

Page 16: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Rate of inlet

2 3

overtopw

Qh

C b

weir crest

over-top

Page 17: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Rate of inlet: Weir coefficients

Shape coefficient

Broad; sharp edges 1.5

Broad; round edges 1.6

rounded 2.1

Sharp 1.9

Roof shaped 2.3

Page 18: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Spillway

Page 19: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Spillway

Page 20: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Settlement

Page 21: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.1 Water conveyance Water transport: Intakes: Settlement

Page 22: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: Open channels: Manning's equation

V = Stream velocity (m s-1)

R = Hydraulic radius

S = Slope

n = Manning roughness

2 3 1 2R SV

n

Page 23: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: Hydraulic radius: producing the “ideal” cross section

Shape “Efficiency”

Semi circular 1

Half hexagon 0.95

Vee 0.89

Half square 0.84

Page 24: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: the ideal cross section and variable flow

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1.0

01/41/23/41

Water level

Re

lati

ve

eff

icie

nc

y

half circle Half hexagon Half square Vee

Page 25: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: Shapes for highly variable flow

Page 26: 1.3. Conveyance

Soil type Slope

Sandy loam 2

Loam 1.5

Clay loam 1

Clay 0.58

Concrete 0.58

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: Soil and side slopes

Page 27: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: Limitations to velocity

• To high – channel erosion

• To low - silting

Page 28: 1.3. Conveyance

Maximum speeds Clear Sedimented

Fine sand 0.45 0.45

Silt loam 0.60 0.60

Fine gravel 0.75 1.00

Stiff clay 1.2 0.90

Coarse gravel 1.2 1.8

Shale, hardpan 1.8 1.5

Steel - 2.4

Timber 6.0 3.0

concrete 12.0 3.6

Minimum speeds 0.1 0.31

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: Maximum and minimum speeds

Page 29: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: getting it wrong…

Page 30: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: grass in channels

Page 31: 1.3. Conveyance

Maximum speeds (m/s) Bare Medium grass cover

Very good grass cover

Very light silty sand 0.3 0.75 1.5

Light loose sand 0.5 0.9 1.5

Coarse sand 0.75 1.25 1.7

Sandy loam 0.75 1.5 2.0

Sandy soil 1.0 1.7 2.3

Firm clay loam 1.5 1.8 2.3

Stiff clay or stiff gravelly soil 1.5 1.8 Unlikely to form

Course gravel 1.8 2.1

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: grass in channels

Page 32: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: High slopes: Hydraulic jump

Page 33: 1.3. Conveyance

A = Cross sectional area (m)

B = breadth of stream at the surface (m)

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: High slopes: Hydraulic jump: Critical depth

2 3Q A

g B

Page 34: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: High slopes: Steps

Page 35: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: High slopes: Steps

Page 36: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: making channels

Page 37: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: making channels

Page 38: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.2 Water conveyance Water transport: making channels

Page 39: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Flume

Page 40: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Flume

Page 41: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Pipe bridge

Page 42: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Pipe bridge

Page 43: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: part full pipes

Page 44: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Culverts

Page 45: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Culverts

Page 46: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Inverted syphons

Page 47: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.3 Water conveyance Obstacles: Inverted syphons

Page 48: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3.4 Water conveyance Comparison between closed pipes and open channels

Open channels Closed pipes

• Susceptible to blocking • Water protected from outside factors

• Needs care with manipulating gradients to stay within limits

• Constant flow rate easy to maintain

• Variable gradient permissible

• Cheap to build • Expensive to build

• Cheap to maintain • Expensive to maintain – blockages are “hidden” and difficult to remove

• Air locks

Page 49: 1.3. Conveyance

B1.3 Water conveyance Summary

• Intakes should be carefully sited to avoid silting or damage. They should also be self-cleaning

• Water conveyance structures should be designed for both high and low flow conditions. A number of methods are available to do this such as weirs, spillways and sluice gates

• The height of the flow is predictable using Bernoulli and manning formulas

• Channel cross sections should take account limitations placed by the soil. Stepping the channels can be used to slow the flow and avoid hydraulic jump

• A number of methods can be used to overcome obstacles such as flumes, pipes bridges, culverts and inverted syphons

Page 50: 1.3. Conveyance

B2.1 Next…..Hydro power