What is meant by the translation and retention of a runoff wave?
Describe intelligible to everyone what is meant by these two processes in hydrology.
Translation:
is a pure time shift of a discharge hydrograph, that means the input signal is shifted by n-time steps
Translation simulates the flow time that a particle needs to travel from point A to point B (For example how long does a drop of precipitation take to reach the lowest point of a catchment area)
Retention:
describes the process of flow balancing
input signal is reduced of its peak value by storage effects during runoff formation
this stretches and compresses the hydrograph —> stretching causes a time delay —> increased in terms of the duration of the signal
Area below the hydrographs remains identical!
Imagine an inflow hydrograph running through two different waters.
The first water body is a completely canalised course with a river bed made out of concret.
The second watercourse is a natural watercourse with an adjacent floodplain.
Describe the model components that you would choose for both cases to model the
retention of the inflow while passing the river system.
Please justify your approach.
For the canalised course a linear reservoir would be suitable, as only little to none retention (no storage effetcs) is to be expected. Only translation. No enlargemens or reduction of the cross-section, small friction
For a natural watercourse with an adjacent floodplain, the slowed down water in the floodplain lead to a retention of the discharge. For that we model the watercourse with a parallel storage cascade due to the different flow conditions between the foreland and the channel, this allows us to assign individual retention constants.
(Retention in natural watercourses (without floodplains) is caused by roughness as well as width and depth variance.)
Draw the resulting discharge hydrograph schematically for the two bodies of water
described in assignment 2.
The hydrograph shown below represents the inflow into the water section.
Blue = canalized water body (faster and higher discharge velocity)
Green = natural watercourse (slower with lower discharge velocity
Describe easily understandable the assumption for a linear reservoir.
With a linear reservoir, it is assumed that the output of a reservoir is linearly dependent on the storage capacity.
This is represented by the retention parameter k, which depends on the time-differences and amounts of the in- & outflow at a certain point.
Continuity equation: Inflow = outflow + storage change (Δ storage)
Qz(t) → S(t) → Qa(t) ➔ Qa(t) = 1/k * S(t)
→ makes the calculation of a storage easier but in reality it is not that simple!
Explain what is meant by a time-space function.
Which process is simulated with this model component?
In a time-space diagram, the subareas of the catchment area that are located beween two isochrones are set using the mean flow time. It is used to simulated Translation.
Describe intelligible to everyone the different effects of a linear reservoir compared to a
cascade of linear reservoirs.
For which task would you use a linear reservoir and when would you use a cascade of
linear reservoirs? Justify your choice.
Single linear reservoir (Sewers):
Used for pure translation models without or low storage effects (retention), e.g. canalized course,
Limited use in reality, range of delay (retardation) is limited
Only one retention parameter & reservoir
Cascade of linear reservoirs:
Used for translation models while taking retention into account, e.g. canalized waters, natural waters
represents a series of identical single linear reservoirs connected with the same retention constants k (storage time of water)
It assumes that a given inflow (e.g. precipitation excess) routes through a series of linear reservoirs, while the outflow from the first reservoir being taken as the inflow to the second, and so on
As the number of reservoirs increases, the curves become flatter and wider, what means that the water needs more time to pass trough a water section→ reflects translation and retention
Range of delay (retardation) is increased
2 parameters: Only one retention parameter but a number of reservoirs n
(( Cascade of parallel reservoirs:
Used for retention model with storage effects (retention), e.g. natural watercourse with floodplains
retentions effects lead to different flow systems / conditions → flows need to be separated with individual /different retention constants → parallel storage cascade
5 parameters: retention parameter of main channel & of flood plain, number of reservoirs n of main channel & of flood plain and the bankfull discharge QBF
))
A water body has a large floodplain area that can easily be activated.
How would you simulate this water
body in a hydrological model in terms
of retention?
Outline your approach.
Channels with floodplain areas should be modeled with a cascade of parallel reservoirs, since retentions effects in the active floodplains lead to different flow systems / conditions. Therefore, the flows need to be separated with individual /different retention constants which is only possible in a cascade of parallel reservoirs. The retention parameter & number of reservoirs is different for the main channel and for the flood plain.
What is the order of magnitude of the retention constant k for a linear reservoir for
Direct runoff
Interflow
Base flow (groundwater flow)?
EXTRA
Draw a discharge hydrograph of a linear Reservoir chain
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