Chap7 Run Off Volume

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BULACAN STATE UNIVERSITY

COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
City of Malolos, Bulacan

RELATIONS BETWEEN
PRECIPITATION AND RUNOFF

Submitted by:

CRUZ, SHAINA DM.


CENTENO, ALMIRA FAYE D.

Submitted to:

ENGR. SARAH FAUSTINO


Instructor

JULY 5, 2018

PRECIPITATION AND RUN OFF


PRECIPITATION
 All liquid and solid water particles that fall from clouds and reach the
ground. These particles include drizzle, rain, snow, snow pellets, ice
crystals, and hail.

RUNOFF
 Can be defined as the portion of the precipitation that makes its way
towards rivers or ocean etc. as surface or subsurface flow.
 Portion of the precipitation seeps into the ground to replenish Earth’s
groundwater. Most of it flows downhill as run off.

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PRECIPITATION AND


RUN OFF
FORMS OF PRECIPITATION / RUNOFF
-Effect on intensity and variability of floods
ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN HIGH FLOWS AND CHANNEL MORPHOLOGY
-Bank full discharge, dominant discharge , etc.

PRECIPITATION / RUNOFF GENERATION

 SNOWMELT
 RAIN-ON-SNOW
 RAINFALL
-low intensity (cold fronts)
-high intensity (thunderstorms)

CLASSIFICATION OF RUN-OFF

SURFACE RUN-OFF
Water flows over the land and is first to reach the streams and rivers
which ultimately discharge the water to the sea.

INTER FLOW OR SUBSURFACE FLOW


A portion of rainfall infiltrates into surface soil and depending upon the
geology of basins, runs as subsurface runoff and reaches the streams and
rivers.

GROUND WATER FLOW OR BASE FLOW


It is that portion of rainfall which after infiltration , percolates down and
joins the ground water reservoir which is ultimately connected to ocean.

RUN OFF PROCESSES


 SURFACE WATER
 WATERSHED – Area of land draining into a stream at a given location
 STREAM FLOW – Gravity movement of water in channels
– Surface and subsurface flow
– Affected by climate’ land cover , soil type ,etc

STREAM FLOW GENERATION

STREAM FLOW – is generated by three mechanisms


HORTORIAN OVERLAND FLOW
SUBSURFACE FLOW
SATURATION OVERLAND FLOW
STREAM FLOW HYDROGRAPH – a graph of stream discharge as a function of
time at a given location on the stream

ESTIMATING STORM WATER (RUNOFF)


VOLUME

Runoff is precipitation that flows over the land surface and is not absorbed
into the ground. In urban areas runoff is high because impermeable surfaces
like rooftops, paved roads and parking lots abound. This runoff moves quickly
off site through storm water drains that usually funnel directly to streams.
This helps to eliminate standing water that can cause poor health conditions
and roads stay clear during storms but it does not allow water to infiltrate
into the water table. In other words, the water doesn’t hang around long
enough to water your vegetable garden. You can change that by
implementing any of the many storm water management techniques
described in this guide, but how much water can you expect to harvest? In a
given storm event the amount of runoff depends on many factors, making
precise calculations complicated, but a rough estimate is easily obtained by
using runoff coefficients. In this method, runoff is calculated by multiplying
the surface area by a coefficient (Table 1) that estimates the conditions of
the particular conditions. This is then multiplied by the depth of rainfall to
obtain a volume of runoff. To make the calculation easier, you can assume
that rainfall depth comes in units of 1 (1in or 1cm etc.), that way you’ll know,
for instance, how much runoff you’ll have per inch of rainfall.
Here’s the equation:
Volume Runoff = Surface Area x Runoff Coefficient x Rainfall Depth

Here’s an example of how it works:


Step 1: Assess Site Conditions
In this example we will use a 200 ft2 patio

Step 2: Obtain Runoff Coefficient


Using the provided table (Table 1), look up the runoff coefficient that most
closely resembles your site. In this case it is 0.98.

Step 3: Do the Math


Vol. Runoff = Surface Area x Runoff Coefficient
x Rainfall Depth
Vol. Runoff = 200ft2 x 0.98 x 0.083ft = 16.3ft3

*Note: Make sure that “Surface Area” and


“Rainfall Depth” are in the same units. It doesn’t matter what you use, just
stay consistent – measurements in feet or meters are generally easiest.

Vol. Runoff = 16.3ft3 x 7.48 gal/ft3 = 121.7 gal

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