Lecture 9 Runoff
Lecture 9 Runoff
Lecture 9 Runoff
RUNOFF LECTURE 09
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RUNOFF
RUNOFF is that part of the precipitation, snow melt, or irrigation water that
appears in uncontrolled surface streams, rivers, drains or sewers.
It is the flow collected from a drainage basin appearing at the outlet of the basin
or catchment
The water which constitutes stream flow may reach the stream or channel by any of
the several routes from the point where it first reaches as precipitation
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SOURCES OF RUNOFF
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COMPONENTS / SOURCES OF RUNOFF
RUNOFF
(TOTAL
RUNOFF)
INTERFLOW
SURFACE GROUND
RUNOFF (Prompt WATER FLOW
subsurface flow)
OVERLAND FLOW/ SURFACE RUNOFF
It is that water which travels over the ground surface to the channel
The channel may be any depression which may carry a rivulet of water
Rivulets are numerous, thus the distance water has to travel as surface runoff,
in some cases, is relatively short; rarely more than hundred feet.
Therefore, surface runoff soon reaches a channel and if it occurs in sufficient
quantity, is an important parameter in forming the peak flood in the channel
The amount of surface runoff may be very small for low rain, since surface
flow over a permeable soil surface can only occur when the rainfall rate
exceeds the local infiltration capacity
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OVERLAND FLOW/ SURFACE RUNOFF
In many small and moderate storms (a rain event), surface runoff
only occurs from impermeable and saturated areas within the basin
are filled.
The extent of such areas (impermeable and saturated) is small
part of the basin area, except in urban areas.
Hence Surface Runoff is the important part in stream flow only
with very heavy or high intensity storms
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INTERFLOW
Some of the water that infiltrates soil surface may move laterally through the upper
soil layers until it enters a stream or a channel
This water is called INTERFLOW or SUBSURFACE STORM FLOW
This water moves slower than the surface runoff and reaches the stream later
The proportion of total runoff that flows as interflow depends on the physical
features of the basin.
A thin soil cover overlying a rock, hard pan or plowbed at small depth below the
surface, favors substantial quantities of interflow
Whereas uniformly permeable soil encourages deeper percolation to ground
water resulting in less interflow
Although travelling very slow than overland flow, It may be huge in quantity
especially in storms of moderate intensity and hence may be a principle factor in the
small rises in stream
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GROUND WATER FLOW/BASE FLOW
Some precipitation percolates deep into the ground until it reaches the water table
The ground water accretion (increase) may eventually discharge into the streams as
ground water also called base flow or dry-weather flow if the water table intersects
the stream or channel
This contribution of groundwater to stream , called as base flow, doesn’t fluctuate
rapidly because of its low velocity
Basins having highly permeable soils and large effluent ground water bodies show
sustained high base flow throughout the year with a relatively small difference in
mean and flood flow
Basins having low permeable soils and large influent ground water bodies have
higher peak flow and average flow ratios
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GROUND WATER FLOW “Perennial” streams flow all
round the year.
“Intermittent” streams normally
cease flowing for weeks or
months each year, and
“Ephemeral" channels flow only
for hours or days after rainfall.
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STREAMFLOW HYDROGRAPH Direct runoff
Baseflow
Perennial river
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FACTORS AFFECTING SURFACE RUNOFF
Related to precipitation characteristics:
Type of precipitation (Snow vs Rain; thunderstorm vs cyclones/frontal rain)
Intensity of rainfall (Light Storm (Drizzle) vs heavy Storm)
Duration of rainfall (a short spell of rain vs sustained rain)
Distribution of storm intensity on basin area (Uniformly distributed vs patches
of rain)
Direction of storm movement (Moving towards outlet or away from outlet)
Other climatic conditions which affect evaporation and transpiration (Temp,
Humidity, Wind Speed, etc)
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FACTORS AFFECTING SURFACE RUNOFF
Related to physical characteristics of basin:
Land use
Type of soil
Area of watershed
Elevation of area
Slope of area
Orientation
Type of drainage network
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ESTIMATION OF RUNOFF
Estimation of runoff is necessary for the following reasons
For determining the storage or yield available
For calculating inflow design floods
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EMPIRICAL FORMULAE AND TABLES
P and R are in cm
Numerical example:
Determine runoff in cm when precipitation over a watershed area is 23cm.
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EMPIRICAL FORMULAE AND TABLES
Lacey’s Formula (Gangetic Plain)
𝑅= .
( )
R & P are in cm
P= mean annual precipitation
F= precipitation durability factor for example for full monsoon (F=1.5) and for a complete
failure of monsoon (0.5)
S= catchment factor depending upon the slope and varies from 0.25 for flat regions to 3.45
for hilly areas
Numerical example:
Determine runoff in cm when mean annual precipitation over a watershed area is 98cm. You may assume a
full monsoon and flat region.
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EMPIRICAL FORMULAE AND TABLES
Khosla Formula (Gangetic Plain)
In this method, the amount of mean annual runoff is calculated by following formula:
𝑇
𝑅=𝑃−
3.74
R & P are in centimeter (cm) T is temperature in oC
A rational form of Khosla formula is based on the concept that the losses are only by
evaporation and transpiration and the water that infiltrates ultimately finds its way into the
stream
Rm = Pm – Lm
Lm = 0.48 Tm (For Tm >4.5oC) Rm = monthly runoff in cm must be ≥0
Pm = monthly rainfall in cm
use tables for (Tm ≤ 4.5oC) Lm = monthly Losses in cm
Annual Runoff= ∑ 𝑅 Tm = mean monthly temperature in oC
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SCS CURVE NUMBER METHOD
The SCS Runoff Curve Number method is developed by the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA) Soil Conservation Service (SCS) and is a method
of estimating rainfall excess from rainfall
The major disadvantage of the SCS method is sensitivity of the method to Curve
Number (CN) values
The basis of the curve number method is the empirical relationship between the
retention (rainfall not converted into runoff) and runoff properties of the
watershed and the rainfall.
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SCS CURVE NUMBER METHOD
The method is based on the simple relationship that
is:
Pe = P - Fa – Ia
Here:
Pe is runoff volume (i.e. excess rainfall)
P is precipitation volume
Fa is continuing abstraction
Ia is the sum of initial losses (infiltration, depression
storage, interception, ET)
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SCS CURVE NUMBER METHOD
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Figure 2.1
Runoff, Q (in)=
Direct Runoff, Q (in)
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GROUND COVER CONDITIONS AND THE PROPER
SELECTION OF CN’S
With all of the ambiguity surrounding the origin & development of CN values, it is
crucial to use the CN value that best mimics the Ground Cover Type and Hydrologic
Condition
• Cover Type
• Treatment
• Hydrologic Condition
• Hydrologic Soil Group (HSG)
• Antecedent Runoff Condition (ARC)
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CURVE NUMBER
•A parameter that combines soil type and land use to estimate runoff potential.
•Based on the Hydrologic Soil Group (HSG), land use and condition.
•Range between 0 and 100. The greater the curve number, the greater the potential
for RO.
•Impervious areas and water surfaces are assigned curve numbers of 98-100.
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Soil Categories:
Category A:
Soil with very high infiltration
rates when wetted thoroughly
Category B:
Soils with moderate infiltration
rates when thoroughly wetted
Category C:
Soils with slow infiltration rates
when thoroughly wetted
Category D:
Soils with very slow infiltration
rates when thoroughly wetted
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ANTECEDENT MOISTURE CONDITION (AMC)
• Antecedent Moisture condition is the preceding relative moisture of the pervious
surfaces prior to the rainfall event. This is also referred to as Antecedent Runoff
Condition (ARC).
• Antecedent Moisture is considered to be low when there has been little preceding
rainfall and high when there has been considerable preceding rainfall prior to the
modeled rainfall event.
• For modeling purposes, we consider watersheds to be AMC(II), which is essentially
an average moisture condition.
• How does Antecedent Moisture effect the CN?
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ANTECEDENT MOISTURE CONDITION (AMC)
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RUNOFF ESTIMATION BY APPLYING UNIT
HYDROGRAPH METHOD
Unit Hydrograph is a DRO hydrograph resulted due to unit effective
precipitation (1cm or 1”) over the watershed
Area under unit hydrograph is always 1cm or 1” rain over the watershed. It
means volume of the precipitation is normalized with watershed area
Unit hydrograph gives the time distribution of Direct runoff due to unit
effective precipitation over the watershed
For any other value of effective precipitation over the watershed, the time
distribution of the Direct runoff can be obtained by using ordinates of unit
hydrograph by applying UNIT hydrograph method
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APPLYING UNIT HYDROGRAPH METHOD
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ESTIMATION OF RUNOFF BY APPLYING UNIT
HYDROGRAPH METHOD
Procedure: Time of concentration: (tc)
For the rainstorm compute effective precipitation it is the time required by a
Peff= Pt – (E+I+T) drop of water to reach at
the outlet from the farthest
Compute time of concentration tc
location of watershed
Select duration of unit hydrograph = tc
Pick the value of (Qp)UHG from the unit hydrograph
Compute the (Qp)x for given x(cm) Precipitation
(Qp)x = x . (Qp)UHG
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BY APPLYING UNIT HYDROGRAPH METHOD
Assumptions:
Amount of rainfall is uniform over the whole watershed
Intensity of precipitation is uniform throughout the area
Limitation:
Applicable for smaller area ≤ 500 km2
Method is applicable for tropical watersheds
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RATIONAL FORMULA
Peak discharge Runoff Coefficient
QP =Q = CIA
Area of watershed
Rainfall intensity
Assumptions:
Rainfall is uniform throughout the area
Intensity used is average intensity of storm
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EXAMPLE
• Rainfall: 5 inch
• Area: 1000 acre
• Soils:
– Class B: 50%
– Class C: 50%
• Antecedent moisture: AMC(III)
• Land use (50% of each in Soil Classes B & C)
– Residential : 52%
• 40% with 1/3 acre average lot size
• 12% with 1/8 acre average lot size
– Paved roads: 18% with curbs and storm sewers
– Open land: 16%
• 50% fair grass cover
• 50% good grass cover
– Parking lots, etc.: 14% 36
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