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The document provides an overview of spillways, which are structures designed to control water flow from a dam to prevent overflow and potential damage. It details the essential requirements, components, and various types of spillways, including service, auxiliary, and emergency spillways, as well as hydraulic criteria for their design. The importance of adequate spillway capacity and its role in flood control and safe dam operation is emphasized.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views49 pages

Lennc

The document provides an overview of spillways, which are structures designed to control water flow from a dam to prevent overflow and potential damage. It details the essential requirements, components, and various types of spillways, including service, auxiliary, and emergency spillways, as well as hydraulic criteria for their design. The importance of adequate spillway capacity and its role in flood control and safe dam operation is emphasized.

Uploaded by

bayisademise
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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EMBANKMENT DAM

SPILLWAY
Outlines
Introduction
Essential requirement of
spillway
Component of spillway
Type of spillway
Introduction
 Spillway is the section of the dam designed to pass
water from the upside of the dam to the downside
of the dam.
 Or/ is structure used to provide the controlled
release of flows from a dam or levee into a
downstream area, typically the riverbed/natural
river of the dammed river itself
 It ensure that the water does not overflow and
damage or destroy the dam
Cont…
 Spillways are provided for storage dams
 To release surplus or flood water,

 To by pass flows exceeding those which are


turned into the diversion system.
 For diversion dams
 To bypass flows exceeding those, which are
turned into the diversion system
 The choice of Spillway is a function of the
 Nature of the site

 Type of dam and

 Overall economics of the scheme


Cont…
 The importance of a safe spillway cannot be
overemphasized; many failures of dams have been
caused by spillway of insufficient capacity
 A spillway may be located either
 Within the body of the dam or

 At one end of the dam or

 Entirely away from the dam as an independent


structure
Cont…
As a general functions of spillway are:
Maintaining normal river water functions
(compensation water supply)

 Discharging water for utilization

Maintaining initial water level in the flood-


control operation

Controlling floods

Controlling additional floods


Essential requirements of a spillway
The following are essential requirement of spillway
 The spillway must have sufficient capacity.

 It must be hydraulically and structurally adequate.

 It must be so located that it provides safe disposal of


water i.e., spillway discharge will not erode or
undermine the D/S toe of the dam.

 The bounding surface of spillway must be erosion


resistant to withstand high scouring velocity created
by the drop from reservoir surface to tail water.

 Usually some devices are needed for energy dissipation


on the D/S side of spillway
Spillway Capacity
 The required capacity of a spillway, i.e. the maximum
outflow rate through the spillway, may be determined
by flood routing (Time & magnitude of flow) and
requires the following data:
i. Inflow hydrograph (plot of rate of inflow vs time)
ii. Reservoir capacity curve (plot of reservoir storage
Vs water surface elevation)
iii. Discharge curve (plot of rate of outflow vs
reservoir water surface elevation).
 By flood routing, corresponding to a particular inflow hydrograph, the
maximum outflow rate and maximum rise in the water surface may be
determined
Cont…
 However, the required capacity of a spillway depends
on the following factors:

 The inflow flood

 The available storage capacity

 The discharge capacity of other outlet works

 Whether the spillway is gated or ungated

 The possible damages if a spillway of adequate


capacity is not provide
Component of spillway
The following are the main components of a
spillway:

Control Structure

Discharge channel (or waterway, or


conveyance structure):

Terminal structure or energy dissipater

Entrance or approach channel and outlet


channel
a) Control structure
 Major component, which regulates and controls the
outflow from the reservoir

 It prevents outflow from a reservoir below a fixed


level and allows the flow when the water surface in
the reservoir rises above the level

 Gates may also be provided on the crest of the


control structure to regulate the flow of water
from the reservoir
b) Discharge channel (or waterway, or conveyance
structure

 Its main function is to convey the water safely


from the reservoir downward to the river
 Located next to the control structure
 The conveyance structure may be the d/s face
of the spillway, an open channel excavated
along the ground surface, a closed conduit
placed through or under the dam, or a tunnel
excavated through an abutment
c) Terminal structure or energy dissipater

Provided to dissipate the high energy of flow


from spillway before the flow is returned to
the river

It is provided on the downstream of the


spillway.
d) Entrance or approach channel and outlet channel

 Entrance channels may be required to draw water from

the reservoir and convey it to the control structure.

 Similarly outlet channels may be required to convey the

spillway flow from the terminal structure to the river

channel below the dam.

 The entrance and outlet channels are not required where

a spillway draws water directly from the reservoir and

delivers it directly back into the river; e.g. overflow

spillway
Type of spillway

1. According to their function as


 Service (or main) spillways

 Auxiliary Spillways

 Emergency spillways

2. According to Mode of Control as:


 Free (or uncontrolled) spillways

 Gated (or controlled) spillways


Cont…
3. According to hydraulic criteria as:
Straight drop spillway
 Overflow or ogee spillway
 Chute or open channel or Trough spillway
 Side channel spillway
 Siphon spillway
 Shaft or Morning Glory spillway
Conduit or tunnel spillway
According to their function as
A. Service (or main) spillways
 Designed for frequent use in conveying flood releases
from the reservoir to a watercourse downstream
from a dam.
 It is designed to pass the entire design flood
B. Auxiliary Spillways
 Designed for infrequent use and may sustain limited
damages when used.
 It is provided as a supplement to the main spillway and its
crest is so located that it comes into operation only after
the floods for which the main spillway is designed are
exceeded
Cont…
C. Emergency spillways

 Designed to provide a reserve protection against


overtopping of a dam and are intended for use under
extreme conditions, such as misoperation or malfunction
of a service spillway or other emergency conditions.

 Under normal reservoir operation, emergency spillways


are never required to function.
Cont…
Some of the situations, which may lead to
emergency, are:
an enforced shut down of outlet works,

a malfunctioning of spillway gates,

the necessity for bypassing the regular


spillway because of damage or failure of some
part of that structure
According to hydraulic criteria

1. Straight drop spillway


 This is the simplest type of spillway, which is
constructed in the form of low height weir having d/s
face either vertical or nearly vertical

 The free over fall spillway is suitable for thin arch dams
and for those dams with nearly vertical downstream
face and would permit free fall of water.

 water flowing over the crest of the spillway drops as a


free jet clearly way from the downstream face of the
spillway
2. Overflow or ogee spillway
Overflow spillways are by far the most widely
adopted.
They are mainly used on masonry or concrete
dams, and if used with earth-fill need a separate
concrete structure
Here water is guided smoothly over the crest of
the spillway and is made to glide over the
downstream face of the spillway.
Most of the spillways are overflow types
 Large capacities,
 Higher hydraulic conformities, and
 Adaptable to almost all types of dam
Construction of a small overflow spillway
3. Chute or open channel or Trough spillway
 A spillway whose discharge is conveyed from the
reservoir to the downstream river level through an open
channel, placed either along a dam abutment or through a
saddle

 It can be provided on any type of foundation,

 It is commonly used with the earth and rock fill dams,

 It becomes economical if earth received from spillway


excavation is used in dam construction.

 located through the abutment adjacent to the dam


4. Side channel spillway

Side-channel spillways are commonly used to


release water flow from a reservoir in places
where the sides are steep and have a
considerable height above the dam.

A trapezoidal cross section is the most


commonly used along the length of the channel
Hoover Dam side channel spillway
5. Siphon spillway
Siphons have been used as spillways for
reservoirs and canals since the middle of 18th
century
located either within the body of the dam, or
at one end of it or entirely away from it,
independently in a saddle
If large capacity is not required as available
space is restricted then siphon spillway can be
adopted
6. Shaft or Morning Glory spillway
 The shaft spillway is simply a closed conduit in which the flood
flow is carried rapidly from a higher to a lower elevation.

 In shaft spillway water enters a horizontal crest, drops


through a vertical or a sloping shaft and then flows to the
down stream river channel through a horizontal or nearly
horizontal conduit or tunnel.

 This type of spillway can be used advantageously at dam


sites in narrow canyons where the abutments rise steeply
or where a diversion tunnel or conduit is available for use
as the downstream leg

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