Unit Hydrograph Jan 2014
Unit Hydrograph Jan 2014
Unit Hydrograph Jan 2014
Unit Hydrograph
Dr. Syafalni
Research Professor in Hydrology
Stream Flow
Stream flow refers to hydrologic process that
transfers water falling as precipitation onto a
watershed from the land surface to the
oceans.
Quantitatively, streamflow refers to the flow
rate, or discharge of water in m3/s across a
stream channel cross-section.
Q
(m3/s)
Time (months)
Ephemeral
Q
(m3/s)
Time (months)
Main
channel
Surface Runoff or
Overland Flow
Main
channel
Quick Interflow
Base flow
Definitions
The watershed or catchment or drainage basin is the area of
the land draining into a stream at a given location.
Excess rainfall (ER), or effective rainfall, is that rainfall which is
neither retained on the land surface nor infiltrated into the
soil.
After flowing across the watershed surface, excess rainfall
becomes direct runoff (DR) at the watershed out let.
The graph of excess rainfall vs. time is called excess rainfall
hyetograph (ERH).
The graph of direct runoff vs. time is called direct runoff
hydrograph (DRH)
The base flow is the slowly varying flow in the stream during
rainless period. The sources is the water stored in the banks or the
groundwater storage in the basin.
The abstractions or losses refer to the difference between total
rainfall hyetograph and the excess rainfall hyetograph.
ERH and DRH are key component of the rainfall runoff
relationships.
Time parameters of DRH
tc
Effective
Rainfall
Intensity
tp
ERH
DRH
Discharge
Tb
Time
Components of Hydrograph
1. Rising Limb
2. Crest segment
3. Recession Limb
Point
of
rise
Direct
Discharge
Runoff
Base flow
Time
Peak
N is in days
Point
of
rise
A is in sq. km.
Direct
Discharge
Runoff
Fixed time
point
a
Base flow
Time
Example
Time
h
10
11
12
Q
m3/s
2.89
2.8
2.7
6.23
14.51
17.85
13.04
9.35
5.95
4.25
2.98
2.12
1.70
Time
(hour)
a
2.7
2.7
2.7
2.7
2.73
2.78
2.7
2.77
2.86
2.7
2.80
2.94
2.7
2.84
3.02
2.7
2.87
3.10
2.7
2.91
3.18
2.7
2.94
3.26
10
2.7
2.7 (10.3)
2.98(10)
3.34(9.7)
N=5
18
16
End Point
14
Discharge (m3/s)
12
Streamflow Hydrograph
10
Direct
Runoff
6
End point from semi-log plot
Fixed Base
ST. Horizontal Line
9.7 hour
0
Time (hrs)
10
12
Unit Hydrograph
Assumptions
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
I (t) = I 0 t < D
=
tD
D
ERH
Qp
UH
Discharge
U(D,t)
Tp
Time
Unit hydrograph
Qu
1 cm
Time base
Time
Principle of Superposition.
Ie
Qu
1 cm
Time
Effective
rainfall
Time base
Runoff
Composite hydrograph
Time base
Time
Principle of Superposition
D
cm/hr
Time
1
ERH
0.6
0.2
UH = U (D, t)
0.2
1.2
0.4
0.4
Q1(t) = U(D,t)(I1D)
Q2(t)=U(D, t-D)(I2D)
1.8
0.6
0.6
cm/hr
U(D,t-D)=0; tD
0.6
0.2
2.4
1.8
Time
U(D,t-2D)=0; t2D
3
1.2
0.4
Q3(t)=U(D, t-2D)(I3D)
j=1
INTPUT (cm)
Discrete Convolution
Convolution= Multiplication +Translation + Addition
m3/s/cm
M=3
n-m+1 = 6
U1
U2
U3
U4
U5
U6
OUTPUT (m3/s)
Qn
I3U1
I3U2
I3U3
I2U2
I2U1
I1U1
I1U2
I2U3
I1U3
I1U4
Qn = Im Un-m+1
I3U4
m=1
I2U4
I2U5
I3U5
I1U5
IU
I2U6 I3U6
n=8
UH Application
Example
Stream flows measured from a 557.3 sqr. km. basin because of 6-hour rainstorm
of uniform intensity are given below. Assume a constant base flow of 15 m 3/s.
derive 6-hours UH for the basin. All stream flows are in m3/s
Hour
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4
Midnight
15
145
55
15
6 A.M.
20
115
40
Noon
255
85
30
6 P.M.
190
70
20
Solution
DRH=Streamflow Base flow
Ord.
Streamflow
(m3/s)
Base flow
(m3/s)
DRH
(m3/s)
UH
(m3/s/cm)
15
15
20
15
1.5
255
15
240
72
190
15
175
52.5
145
15
130
39
115
15
100
30
85
15
70
21
70
15
55
16.5
55
15
40
12
10
40
15
25
7.5
11
30
15
15
4.5
12
20
15
1.5
13
15
15
DRH =
860 m3/s
ER = DRH /Area
ER= (860x6x3600x100)
(557.3 x 106)
= 3.33 cm
UH = DRH/3.33
Problem:
Derive by deconvolution a 6-hour UH from the following data for a watershed having
a drainage a drainage area of 216 km2, assuming a constant rainfall abstraction rate
and a constant base of 20 m3/s.
6-hour
period
Rainfall
cm
Stream flow
(m3/s)
Base flow
(m3/s)
D. R. H.
(m3/s)
1.5
26
20
3.5
71
20
51
2.5
174
20
154
1.5
226
20
206
173
20
153
99
20
79
49
20
29
33
20
13
26
20
10
22
20
11
21
20
= 7 cm
ABSTRACTIONS = 9-7 = 2 cm
-INDEX = 0.5 cm/6-hr
UH = DRH/7.0 = 0.86, 7.28, 29,43, 21.86, 11.28, 4.14, 1.86, 0.86, 0.28, 0.14
Discrete Convolution
Qn = Im Un-m+1
m=1
Qn = Im Un-m+1
m=1
ERH
Unit Hydrograph
U1
I1
I1U1
I2
I2 U1
3
4
U2
U3
U4
U5
U6
DRH
U7
U8
Q1
I1U2
I2 U2
Q2
I1 U3
I2 U3
5
6
7
8
9
Notes: I = Effective rainfall intensity
Q3
I1U4
I2U4
Q4
I1U5
I2U5
Q5
I1 U6
I2 U6
Q6
I1 U7
I2 U7
Q7
I1 U8
Q8
I2 U8
Q9
UH Derivation (Deconvolution)
m= 1, 2, .. M, n= 1, 2,
Q1 = I1 U1
Q2 = I2U1 + I1U2
Q3 = I3 U1 + I2U2 + I1U3
QN-1 =
QN =
U1 = Q1/I1
U2 = (Q2 I2U1)/I1
U3 = (Q3 I2 U2 I3U1)/I1
And so on
+ IMUN-M+1
Example
Find the half-hour UH using the ERH and DRH ordinates as given in the Table. Also
determine the area of the basin which will produce this UH
No.
Time
Excess Rainfall
cm
Direct runoff
(m3/s)
2.70
12.12
30
4.90
54.45
100
4.60
150.00
130
258.56
200
300.86
230
221.83
300
111.03
330
52.27
400
39.70
10
430
23.50
11
500
8.86
U(0.5,t)
(m3/s/cm)
4.49
12.02
26.09
27.93
16.29
5.01
4.28
3.06
1.86
Area of the basin which will produce the above UH = (101.03 x 30 x 60 x 100)/10 6 =
18.18 sq. km.
Example
Ordinates of a 3-hour UH and base flow for a stream are given in the table. Ordinates of
ERH are also given, determine the stream flow hydrograph using discrete convolution.
Time
(hr)
UH
(m3/s/cm)
Base flow
(m3/s)
12 00
10
15 00
47
10
18 00
75
11
21 00
57
11
24 00
43
11
03 00
31
12
06 00
24
12
09 00
14
12
12 00
13
15 00
13
18 00
13 (become constant
afterwards)
3.3
2.3
Rain
Excess
(cm)
1.1
12
Time (hours)
Time
ERH
hour
cm
12 00
1.1
15 00
2.3
51.7
18 00
108.1
82.5
21 00
3.5
172.5
62.7
164.5
131.1
47.3
262.5
98.9
34.1
199.5
71.3
26.4
150.5
55.2
15.4
108.5
32.2
8.8
84
18.4
2.2
49
4.6
28
24 00
03 00
06 00
09 00
12 00
15 00
18 00
21 00
24 00
03 00
47
75
57
43
31
24
14
DRH
Stream
flow =
DRH +
Base
flow
m3/s
m2/s
10
51.7
61.7
190.6
200.6
235.2
246.2
342.9
353.9
395.5
407.5
297.2
309.2
221.1
233.1
149.5
162.5
104.6
117.6
53.6
66.6
28
41
20
13
PEAK
FLOW
Example
Calculate the stream flow hydrograph for a storm of 15 cm excess rainfall, with 5 cm in
the first half-hour, 7.5 cm in second half-hour and 2.5 cm in the third half-hour. Assume a
constant base flow of 14 m3/s thorough out the flood. The half-hour below. The drainage
basin area is 18.18 sq. km. Check that the total volume of direct runoff is equal to the
total excess rainfall.
Time ords
hour
UH ords
(m3/s.cm)
4.49
12.02
26.09
27.93
16.29
5.01
4.28
3.06
1.86
Time
ords
ERH
hour
cm
4.49
22.45
7.5
33.67
60.01
2.5
11.22
40.15
130.45
30.05
145.67
139.65
65.22
209.47
81.45
69.82
122.17
25.05
40.72
37.57
21.40
12.52
32.1
15.30
10.7
22.95
7.65
4
5
6
7
8
12.02
26.09
27.93
16.29
5.01
3.06
Stream
flow
ords
m3/s
m3/s
22.45
36.45
93.77
107.77
231.82
245.82
365.39
379.39
356.14
370.14
217.04
231.04
99.69
113.69
59.92
73.95
9.30
42.95
59.95
13.95
21.6
35.6
4.65
4.65
18.65
1515.42 m3/s
1.86
PEAK
FLOW
9
10
11
4.28
DRH
ords
15
Time
10 : 00
11 : 00
Effective rainfall
Intensity
cm/hr
15.0
0.0
Time
10 : 00
11: 30
13 : 00
Q
cm/hr
0.0
10.0
0.0
Time
5
10
ERH
15
10
DRH
10:00
11:00
12:00
S-Hydrograph method
Procedure
1. Determine the X-hour S-hydrograph. The X-hour hydrograph is
derived by accumulating the unit hydrograph ordinates at the
intervals equal to X
2. Lag the X-hour S-hydrograph by a time interval equal to Y hours.
3. Substract ordinates of the two previous S-hydrographs.
4. Multiply the resulting hydrograph ordinates by X/Y to obtain the
Y-hour unit hydrograph
Time base of the Y-hour unit hydrograph is Tb X + Y
S curve method
S curve method works for any duration. The first step is to add a series
of UHs of duration D, each lagged by time period D, This corresponds to
the runoff hydrograph from a continuous rainfall excess intensity of 1/D
inches/hour.
UH Lagging
A UH has a particular duration, D. Unit hydrographs are linear, they can be added,
for example, to generate a hydrograph for a storm 2x, 3x, 4x, etc. longer
1hr UH
2hr UH
By shifting a copy of the S-curve by D hours, and subtracting the ordinates, the
resulting hydrograph (dashed line - - - - - - ) must be due to rainfall of intensity 1/D
inches/hour that lasts for a duration of D hours.
Example
Convert the following 2-hr UH to a 3-hr UH
using the S-curve Method
____________________________________________________
TIME (hr)
2-hr UH Ordinate (cfs)________
.
0
0
1
75
2
250
3
300
4
275
5
200
6
100
7
75
8
50
9
25
10
0
Figure E2-4
Prediction
This method provides a hydrograph that
predicts the behavior of a flood from a storm
of any duration
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Time
0.5-h unit
hydrograph
S-hydrograph
Lagged Shydrograph
1.5-h unit
hydrograph
h(t)
g(t)
g(t-t)
h(t)
(h)
(cfs/in)
(cfs)
(cfs)
(cfs/in)
0.5
404
202
135
1.0
1079
742
495
1.5
2343
1913
1275
2.0
2506
3166
202
1976
2.5
1460
3896
742
2103
3.0
453
4123
1913
1473
3.5
381
4313
3166
765
4.0
274
4450
3896
369
4.5
173
4537
4123
276
5.0
4537
4313
149
Problem
Time
(hour)
UH
m3/s.cm
10
25
50
65
10
70
12
60
14
50
16
40
18
30
20
25
22
15
24
10
26
Once UH, U (D, t) has been obtained for storm duration D, it may be desired
to obtain UH for any duration D for the same basin.
Two possibilities arise:
(i) D is an exact integral multiple of D
(ii) D is not an integral multiple of D
(i). When D is integral multiple of D, method of superposition may be used.
(Example illustrates the procedure).
(ii). When D is not an integral multiple of D; then S-hydrograph method is
used.
S-HYDROGRAPH is a theoretical hydrograph that results from a continuous
rain excess at a constant rate of 1 cm/D-hours for indefinite period. The
resulting hydrograph assumes a deformed S-shape and its ordinates
ultimately approach the rate of excess rainfall at the time of equilibrium.
S-hydrograph method can also be used for case (i) when D is exact multiple
of D
Example
Calculate 2-hour and 3 hour unit hydrographs for a drainage basin from the given 1-hour unit
hydrograph.
Solution: Change in UH duration (Superposition method)
Time
(hour)
1-Hour UH
(m3/s.cm)
Lagged by
1-hour
(m3/s.cm)
Lagged by
2-hour
(m3/s.cm)
2-Hour UH
(m3/s.cm)
3-Hour UH
(m3/s.cm)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(6) = [(2)+(3)+(4)]/3
100
50
33
200
100
150
100
400
200
100
300
233
Note:
800
400
200
600
467
700
800
400
750
633
600
700
800
650
700
500
600
700
550
600
400
500
600
450
500
Compare the
time-base and
peaks of UHs of
different
durations
300
400
500
350
400
10
200
300
400
300
300
11
100
200
300
150
200
12
100
200
50
100
13
100
33
14
Example
Change in UH duration (S-HYDROGRAPH method)
Time
(hour)
2-Hour UH
(m3/s.cm)
2-Hour
S-Curve
(m3/s.cm)
S-Curve
Lagged
3-Hour
(m3/s.cm)
3-Hour UH
(m3/s.cm)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
50
50
33
150
150
100
300
350
233
600
750
50
467
750
1100
150
633
650
1400
350
700
550
1650
750
600
450
1850
1100
500
350
2000
1400
400
10
300
2100
1650
300
11
150
2150
1850
200
12
50
2150
2000
100
13
2150
2100
33
14
2150
2150
Note:
Col.(5) = 2/3 { col.(3) - col.(4)}
Problem
The ordinates of a 1-hour UH at one hour interval in m3/s.cm are: 0, 15, 20, 8, 3, 1
and 0. Calculate the basin area (ha), the S-hydrograph and the two hour UH for the
basin
Solution :
Time
(hour)
1-Hour UH
(m3/s.cm)
1-Hour
S-Curve
(m3/s.cm)
1-hour S-Curve
Lagged 2-Hour
(m3/s.cm)
2-Hour UH
(m3/s.cm)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
15
15
7.5
20
35
17.5
43
15
14
46
35
5.5
47
43
47
46
0.5
47
47
Precipitation (in)
0.5
1.0
1.5
0.5
10
100
200
150
100
50
SOLUTION
The abstraction rate 0.3 in/h and the excess rainfall will be = 0.2,
0.7, 1.2, 0.2
1-hr UH Ordinates ft3/s/in
Time
ERH
hour
in
10
0.2
0.7
20
1.2
12
70
40
0.2
120
140
30
20
240
105
20
40
180
70
10
300
30
120
35
185
20
60
80
10
10
5
6
7
8
9
ERH
2.3
100
200
150
100
DRH
ft3/s
50
2
27
122
292
385
DRH
1404
Area of watershed
= (1404 x3600x
1)x 12/2.3 =
26352000 ft2
=
605 acre
Problem