Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter One
1.1 Introduction
Knowledge of hydrology is essential for engineers dealing with:
irrigation water power engineering
highway engineering inland navigation and
water supply engineering Flood control.
Water is the most complex natural resource correlating its availability from the
atmosphere lithosphere through hydrosphere. The availability of water is highly uneven
in space and time. Some of the basic things to be considered while planning and
designing the engineering structures are:
Maximum flows which are expected to occur at place
Maximum reservoir capacity to be fixed to meet all water demands from
multipurpose reservoir.
minimum flows which can occur during any dry period
Possible regulation of flood at the downstream reaches once the hydraulic structure is
erected.
Possible supply of water from a river to meet water supply demands for agriculture,
hydropower generation, industrial supplies, domestic supplies, navigational
requirements, recreational uses and aquaculture.
Environmental impact of hydraulic structure.
Study of groundwater potential.
Improper assessment of water resources potential is disastrous. Many a times,
underestimation of flood leads to overtopping of the dam and consequent failure of the
structure. For the projects where water potential is overestimated, the system may not be
in a position to full up to the full reservoir level.
Before designing any water resources related structures, evaluation of the hydrologic
potential at the project site is a prerequisite. For this, collection and analysis of long-term
hydrological and meteorological data are essential.
1.2. Definition
The break-up of the word hydrology is: "hydro" and "logy". "Hydro" means water and
"logy" means science. Hydrology is therefore the science of water and is defined as:
the science that deals with the origin, distribution and properties of water on the earth
including that in the atmosphere in the form of water vapor, on the surface as water,
snow or ice, and beneath the surface as ground water.
The study of hydrology is thus the study of three important phases of what is known as
the hydrological cycle, namely rainfall, runoff and evaporation.
Hydrology is therefore bounded above by meteorology, below by geology and at the
land's end by oceanography.
Precipitation
Interception
Surface detention
Interflow Percolation
Stream flow
Base flow GW. Storage
Wa
Water in large bodies (ocean, or large lakes)
Secondly, it may flow over the surface as overland flow into depressions and
channels to be come surface runoff in the form of streams and lakes, from which it
will move either by evaporation back into the atmosphere, or by seepage towards the
groundwater, or by further surface flow into the ocean.
A hydrologic cycle undergoes the complicated process of
Precipitation, interception, evaporation, transpiration, infiltration, percolation,
runoff and various storages.
The evaporated water in atmosphere forms clouds
On condensation it falls as precipitation
The leaves and steams of vegetation intercept some of the precipitated water.
The rest infiltrates into the soil or flows down as surface runoff.
The infiltrated water may join the stream later as subsurface flow or percolates
further down to charge the groundwater potential.
The surface flow joins small streams and then through a network of channels
discharge water to the large water bodies like oceans or seas,
part of the infiltrated water is available to the root of trees and returns to the
atmosphere through a process called transpiration
From most of the processes and storage evaporation takes place continuously.
It is this cycle of water, which maintains life on earth.
Parameters governing the system are many and a minor change in the system causes
drought and flood.
- Vertical percolation of rainwater results in groundwater accretion only if the soil is
highly permeable and if the groundwater is near the surface.
- Low soil permeability encourages overland flow.
Basin recharge and runoff
As rain falls towards the earth, the leaves and steams of vegetation intercept a portion of
it. The water so retained together with depression storage and soil moisture, constitutes
basin recharge, the portion of precipitation which does not contribute to the stream flow
or groundwater.
Depression storage includes the water which is retained as puddles in surface
depressions.
Soil moisture is held as capillary water in the smaller pore space of the soil or as
hygroscopic water absorbed on the surface of soil particles.
Rainwater, exclusive of the water withheld as a basin recharge, may flow three paths
to a stream.
The groundwater component will eventually be removed either by upward capillary
movement to the soil surface and vegetation cover, where it will be returned by
evaporation and transpiration to the atmosphere, or by groundwater seepage and flow into
surface streams and by runoff to the oceans.
If the density of the inflow, outflow and storage volumes are the same
∀ i − ∀ 0 = ΔS (Eq. 1)
Where
∀i = Inflow volume of water into the problem area during the time period,
∀0 = Outflow volume to water from the problem area during the time period, and
S = change in the storage of the water volume over and under the given area during the
given period.
In applying this continuity equation (Eq. 1) to the paths of the hydrologic cycle involving
change of state, the volumes considered are the equivalent volumes of water at a
reference temperature.
In hydrologic calculations, the volumes are often expressed as average depths over the
catchment area. Thus, for example, if the annual stream flow from a 10km 2 catchment is
107
107 m3, it corresponds to a depth of
( 10 x 106 )
= 1 m = 100 cm .
Rainfall, evaporation and often runoff volumes are expressed in units of depth over the
catchment.
While realizing that all the terms in a hydrological water budget may not be known to the
same degree of accuracy, an expression for the water budget of a catchment for a time
interval t is written as
P
Region A P = Precipitation
Earth’s surface E = Evaporation
R1 T = Transpiration
Eg
R2 R = Surface Runoff
Rg Tg
Es Ts
G = Groundwater Flow
Rg= Subsurface Flow
I = Infiltration
I
G1 S = Storage
Sg G2 S = Land Surface
G = Groundwater
G1
I I-O =S
Sg G2
Water Budget in Land Surface (I + G1) - (G2 + Rg + Eg + Tg) = Sg (1)
(P + R1 + Rg) - (R2 + Es + Ts + I) = Ss
Water Budget in Groundwater
(I + G1) - (G2 + Rg + Eg + Tg) = Sg
Level of plastic rock
P - (R2 - R1) - (Es + Eg) - (Ts + Tg) - (G2 - G1) = Ss + Sg * (2)
R (Net Surface Flow) = R2 - R1
E (Net Evaporation) = E2 + E1
T (Net Transpiration) = Ts + Tg
G (Net Groundwater Flow) = G2 - G1
S = Ss + Sg
P-R-E-T-G=S …Eq. 2
Equation (2) is the water budget equation for the catchment. All terms in the equation
have the dimensions of volume. Note that all these terms can be expressed as depth over
the catchment area, (for Eq. in centimeters), and in fact this is a very common unit.
Further, the infiltration does not occur explicitly in the water budget (Eq. 2) as the
infiltration, which is a loss to the runoff process is a gain to the ground water system.
Example 1: a lake had a water surface elevation of 103.200 m above datum at the
beginning of a certain month. In that month the lake received
An average inflow of 6.0 m3/s from surface runoff sources.
In the same period the outflow from the lake had an average value of 6.5m3/s.
Further, in that month, the lake received a rainfall of 145 mm and
The evaporation from the lake surface was estimated as 6.10cm.
Write the water budget equation for the lake and calculate the water surface elevation of
the lake at the end of the month.
The average lake surface area can be taken as 5000 ha. Assume that there is no
contribution to or from the ground water storage.
Solution: In a time period t the water budget for the lake can be written as
Input volume – Output volume = change in storage
( I Δt + P. A ) − (Q ΔT + EA ) = ΔS
Where P = precipitation,
I = average inflow rate, E = evaporation,
A = surface area of the lake and
Q = average outflow rate,
S = change in lake storage volume.
Here t = 1 month = 30 x 24 x 60 x 60 = 2.592x106s = 2.592 Ms In one month: