CIVE 445 - ENGINEERING HYDROLOGY
CHAPTER 5B: HYDROLOGY OF MIDSIZE CATCHMENTS, UNIT HYDROGRAPH
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5.2 UNIT HYDROGRAPH TECHNIQUES
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- The unit hydrograph is used in midsize catchment analysis as a means to develop a hydrograph for a given storm.
- The word "UNIT" is normally taken to refer to a unit depth of effective rainfall or runoff.
- It is the unit depth of runoff lasting a "UNIT" increment of time (indivisible increment).
- The unit increment can be 1, 2, 3, 6, 12, 24 hr.
- Unit increments of 1 to 6 hr are common in midsize catchment analysis.
- The unit hydrograph is that produced by a unit depth of effective rainfall/runoff uniformly distributed over the entire catchment and lasting a
specified duration.
- Assume that a certain storm produces 1 cm of runoff and the effective rainfall covers uniformly a 50 km2
catchment over a period of 2 hr.
- The 1-cm hydrograph, or unit hydrograph, measured at the outlet would be the 2-hr unit hydrograph for this catchment.
- A unit hydrograph is calculated
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directly, from rainfall-runoff data, or
- indirectly, using a synthetic unit hydrograph formula.
- Only the indirect method is appropriate for ungaged catchments.
- A catchment can have several unit hydrographs, each for a specified duration.
- With one unit hydrograph of one duration, the other unit hydrographs for other durations can be derived by the methods of:
- superposition,
and
- S-hydrograph.
- Assumptions of unit hydrograph theory:
- linearity, and
- superposition.
- Under linearity, given a unit hydrograph, a hydrograph for a runoff depth other than unity can be obtained by multiplying the respective hydrograph
ordinates by the indicated runoff depth.
- The various multiplied hydrographs can be lagged and superimposed to develop the composite, flood or storm hydrograph.
- This process is referred to as the convolution of the unit hydrograph with the effective storm pattern.
- Convolution: Figure 5-5.
- The upper limit of applicability of the unit hydrograph is not well defined.
- Sherman, the developer of the unit hydrograph, used it with basins varying from 1300 to 8000 km2.
- Linsley in his text mentions an upper limit of 5000 km2 to preserve accuracy.
- Applicable for the midsize catchment:
From 2.5 km2 to 250-1000 km2.
Development of unit hydrographs: Direct method
- For the direct method, the stream must be gaged.
- The rainfall-runoff records should be screened to identify storms suitable for hydrograph analysis.
- The selected storms should be of uniform rainfall intensity temporally and spatially.
- This latter requirement is not met as catchment size increases above 250-1000 km2.
- Catchment lag is a measure of the time elapsed between the occurrence of unit rainfall and the occurrence of unit runoff.
- Catchment lag is a global measure of catchment response, encompassing hydraulic length, catchment gradient, drainage density, and drainage patterns.
- There are many definitions of catchment lag, lag time, or simply lag.
- The T2 lag is the most common: the time elapsed from the centroid of effective rainfall to the peak of runoff.
- Runoff volume is equal to 1 unit of effective rainfall depth.
- Short lags feature high peaks and short time bases; long lags result in low peaks and long time bases.
- Catchment lag is empirically related to catchment characteristics:
- in which tl = catchment lag; L = catchment length; Lc =
length to catchment centroid; S = weighted measure of catchment slope, and C and N are empirical parameters.
Methodology
- Storms suitable for unit hydrograph analysis should be about the same duration.
- The duration should be about 10 to 30% of the catchment lag.
- This implies that runoff is of the subconcentrated type.
- Subconcentrated flow is a characteristic of midsize catchments.
- Not all catchments concentrate in nature.
- Midsize catchments are too large to concentrate flow; calculation shifts to the hyetograph and the maximum rainfall intensity.
- Several individual storms are analyzed for consistency.
- The following steps are applied to each storm:
- Separation of the measured hydrograph into direct runoff hydrograph (DRH) and baseflow (BF).
- Integration of the DRH to calculate the direct runoff volume (DRV).
- Dividing the DRV by the catchment area to determine direct runoff depth (DRD).
- Division of DRH ordinates by DRD to determine the unit hydrograph (UH) ordinates.
- Estimation of the UH duration.
- The catchment unit hydrographs is obtained by averaging ordinates for all storms.
- Minor adjustments may be necessary to ensure that the volume under the UH is equal to 1 unit of runoff.
Hydrograph separation
- Only the direct runoff component is used in the computation of the unit hydrograph.
- It is necessary to separate the measured hydrograph into direct runoff and baseflow.
- Procedures for baseflow separation are arbitrary and empirical.
- Baseflow separation: Figure 5-7.
- Example of the development of a unit hydrograph by the direct method: Example 5-2.
Development of unit hydrographs: Indirect method
- In the absence of stream gaging, unit hydrographs are derived by synthetic means.
- A synthetic unit hydrograph is derived based on an established formula, derived empirically.
- Principle of synthetic unit hydrograph theory: Since the volume of the unit hydrograph is known (1 unit of volume),
an assumption of hydrograph shape leads to the peak flow.
- If a triangular shape is assumed, the volume is equal to:
V = [Qp Tbt ) / 2 = A (1)
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- In which V= unit hydrograph volume; Qp = peak flow; Tbt= time base of the
triangular unit hydrograph; A = catchment area.
- Solving for peak flow:
- Synthetic unit hydrographs related time base to catchment lag.
- In turn, catchment lag is related to catchment shape, length, and slope.
- Synthetic unit hydrographs
- Snyder (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
- NRCS (ex-SCS)
- TVA
- Clark (Chapter 10, Section 2).
Snyder's synthetic unit hydrograph
- The analysis of a large number of hydrographs from catchments in the Appalachian region led Snyder to the following formula for lag:
- In which Ct = a coefficient accounting for slope and associated catchment storage.
- Snyder's formula for peak flow is:
- with Cp defined as follows:
- Cp is an empirical coefficient relating triangular time base to lag.
- Cp values are in the range 0.56-0.69.
- These are associated with Tbt / tl ratios values in the range 3.57-2.90.
- In SI units, Snyder's formula for peak flow is:
- in which Qp for 1 cm in m3/s, A in km2, tl in hours.
- In U.S. customary units, Snyder's formula for peak flow is:
- in which Qp for 1 inch in cfs, A in mi2, tl in hours.
- The unit hydrograph duration is estimated as:
- The time-to-peak is equal to one-half of the storm duration plus the lag:
- When calculating the actual time base of the unit hydrograph, Snyder included interflow as part of direct runoff.
- This results in a time base longer than that corresponding only to direct runoff.
- Snyder's formula for actual time base is:
- in which Tb is in hours and tl in hours.
- For a 24-hr lag, this formula gives Tb/tl = 6, which is reasonable for large lag.
- For a 6-hr lag, this formula gives Tb/tl = 90/6 = 15, which is too long a time base.
- For short lags, experience shows that Tb/tp = 5.
- This translates into Tb/tl = 5.45 instead of 15.
- The Snyder method gives peak flow, time-to-peak, and time base.
- Additional formulas for W50
(page 176)
and W75 (page 177)
help estimate the shape of the unit hydrograph.
- It can be shown that the maximum value of Cp is 11/12.
- Triangular time base cannot be less than twice the time-to-peak.
- In the limit, when diffusion is absent, Tbt / tp = 2.
- Since tp / tl = 12/11.
- Then Cp = 2 / (Tbt / tl) = 2 / [(Tbt / tp) (tp / tl)] = tl / tp = 11/12.
- Since Ct increases with catchment storage, and Cp
decreases with catchment storage, the ratio Ct/Cp can be directly related to catchment storage.
- The reciprocal ratio Cp/Ct can be directly related to extent of urban development, since the latter is inversely related to
catchment storage.
NRCS synthetic unit hydrograph
Change in unit hydrograph duration
- A unit hydrograph is valid only for a given (effective) storm duration.
- The storm hyetograph is defined in terms of a specified constant time interval.
- For convolution, the storm duration has to be the same as the time interval of the storm hyetograph.
- If an X-hr unit hydrograph is going to be used with a Y-hr-defined storm hyetograph, it is necessary to convert the X-hr unit hydrograph
into a Y-hr unit hydrograph.
- Once an X-hr unit hydrograph is known, any other Y-hr unit hydrograph can be derived from it.
- There are two methods:
- superposition
- S-hydrograph.
- The superposition method converts an X-hr UH into an nX-hr UH, in which n is an integer such as 2 or 3.
- The S-hydrograph method converts an X-hr UH into a Y-hr UH, regardless of the ratio X/Y (for example, 3/2 or 2/3).
Superposition method
- This method converts an X-hr UH into an nX-hr UH, in which n is an integer.
- The procedure consists of lagging n X-hr UH in time, each for an interval equal to X hours,
summing the ordinates of all n hydrographs,
and dividing the summed ordinates by n to obtain the nX-hr UH.
- The procedure is illustrated by Example 5-5.
S-hydrograph method
- This method converts an X-hr UH into an Y-hr UH, regardless of the ratio X/Y.
- The procedure consists of the following steps:
- Determine the X-hr S-hydrograph accumulating the X-hr unit hydrograph ordinates at intervals
equal to the duration.
- Lag the X-hr S-hydrograph by a time interval equal to Y hours.
- Substract ordinates of the two previous S-hydrographs.
- Multiply the resulting hydrograph ordinates by X/Y to obtain the Y-hr UH.
- The procedure is illustrated by Example 5-6.
Convolution and composite or flood hydrographs
- The UH is convoluted with the effective storm hyetograph to derive a composite or flood hydrograph, to be used for design.
- Convolution is based on the principles of linearity and superposition.
- The procedure is illustrated by Example 5-7.
Go to Chapter 5C.
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