Modeling
Modeling
Modeling
flow
Precipitation
time
Hydrologic
Model
time
Hydrograph Modeling:
The input signal
Hyetograph can be
A future design event
What happens in response to a rainstorm of a
hypothetical magnitude and duration
See http://hdsc.nws.noaa.gov/hdsc/pfds/
A past storm
Hydrologic
Model
time
flow
Precipitation
time
Hydrologic
Model
time
flow
Precipitation
time
Hydrograph Modeling
What is a model?
What is the purpose of a model?
Types of Models
Physical
http://uwrl.usu.edu/facilities/hydraulics/projects/projects.html
Analog
Ohms law analogous to Darcys law
Mathematical
Equations to represent hydrologic process
Conceptual
Short cuts full physics to capture essential processes
Linear reservoir model
Empirical/Regression
i.e temperature index snowmelt model
Stochastic
Evaluates historical time series, based on probability
Spatial representation
Lumped
Distributed
Hydrograph Modeling
Physically Based, distributed
Physics-based equations for each process in
each grid cell
See dhsvm.pdf
Kelleners et al., 2009
Pros and cons?
Hydrologic Modeling
Systems Approach
A transfer function represents the lumped processes operating in a watershed
-Transforms numerical inputs through simplified paramters that lump
processes to numerical outputs
-Modeled is calibrated to obtain proper parameters
-Predictions at outlet only
-Read 9.5.1
P
Mathematical
Transfer Function
t
Semi-Distributed Model
REW 2
.(U ) .( ) Qss
t
REW 3
REW 4
REW 1
pq
t
Distributed Model
REW 5
REW 7
REW 6
q
e.g: Stanford Watershed Model
Process Representation:
Parametric
Physics-Based
Coarser
Fine
Data Requirement:
Small
Large
Computational Requirement:
8
Transfer Functions
2 Basic steps to rainfall-runoff transfer functions
1. Estimate losses.
W minus losses = effective precipitation (Weff) (eqns 9-43, 9-44)
Determines the volume of streamflow response
Transfer Functions
General Concept
Task
Weff = Qef
W
Losses
t
Loss Methods
Methods to estimate effective precipitation
You have already done it one wayhow?
However,
Loss Methods
Physically-based infiltration equations
Chapter 6
Green-ampt, Richards equation, Darcy
No loss method
Duration of rainfall is the time of concentration
Flood peak only
Used for urban watersheds (see table 9-10)
SCS Concepts
If Vr = W-Vi-W eff,
Weff
(W Vi ) 2
W Vi Vmax
SCS Concept
Assuming Vi = 0.2Vmax (??)
Curve Number
The SCS classified 8500 soils into four hydrologic groups according to
their infiltration characteristics
Curve Number
Related to Land Use
Transfer Function
1. Estimate effective precipitation
SCS method gives us Weff
Q
Base flow
t
-What actually gives shape to the hydrograph?
Transfer Function
2. Estimate temporal distribution of effective precipitation
Various methods route water to stream channel
Many are based on a time of concentration and many other rules
SCS method
Assumes that the runoff hydrograph is a triangle
On top of base flow
Tw = duration of effective P
Tc= time concentration
Q
Tb=2.67Tr
t
Transfer Functions
The time it takes water to travel from the hydraulically most distant part of the watershed to
the outlet
Empically derived, based on watershed properties
Transfer Functions
2. Temporal distribution of effective
precipitation
Unit Hydrograph
An X (1,2,3,) hour unit hydrograph is the
characteristic response (hydrograph) of a
watershed to a unit volume of effective water
input applied at a constant rate for x hours.
1 inch of effective rain in 6 hours produces a 6
hour unit hydrograph
Unit Hydrograph
The event hydrograph that would result from 1
unit (cm, in,) of effective precipitation (Weff=1)
A watershed has a characteristic response
This characteristic response is the model
Many methods to construct the shape
Qef
1
t
Unit Hydrograph
1. How do we Develop the characteristic
response for the duration of interest the
transfer function ?
Unit Hydrograph
Apply: For a storm of an appropriate duration, simply
multiply the y-axis of the unit hydrograph by the depth of the
actual storm.
See spreadsheet example
Assumes one burst of precipitation during the duration of the storm
Q(t ) Weff U t d
0
Unit Hydrograph
Many ways to manipulate UH for storms of
different durations and intensities
S curve, instantaneous
Thats for an engineering hydrology class
Unit Hydrograph
How do we derive the characteristic
response (unit hydrograph)?
Empirical
Unit Hydrograph
How do we derive the characteristic
response (unit hydrograph)?
Empirical page 451
Note: 1. approximately equal duration
What duration are they talking about?
Unit Hydrograph
Assumptions
Linear response
Constant time base
Unit Hydrograph
Construction of characteristic response by
synthetic methods
Scores of approaches similar to the SCS
hydrograph method where points on the unit
hydrograph are estimated from empirical
relations to watershed properties.
Snyder
SCS
Clark
Since peak flow and time of peak flow are two of the most important parameters
characterizing a unit hydrograph, the Snyder method employs factors defining these
parameters, which are then used in the synthesis of the unit graph (Snyder, 1938).
The parameters are Cp, the peak flow factor, and Ct, the lag factor.
The basic assumption in this method is that basins which have similar physiographic
characteristics are located in the same area will have similar values of Ct and Cp.
Therefore, for ungaged basins, it is preferred that the basin be near or similar to
gaged basins for which these coefficients can be determined.
t LAG Ct ( L Lca ) 0.3
tbase 3
t duration
q peak
t LAG
8
t LAG
5.5
640 AC p
t LAG
The final shape of the Snyder unit hydrograph is controlled by the equations
for width at 50% and 75% of the peak of the UHG:
1.2
Tb 2.67 x Tp
Tlag
1
Tr Tb - Tp 1.67 x Tp
0.8
qpT p
2
qpT r
2
qp
2
Flow ratios
(T p +T r )
2Q
qp=
T p +T r
Cum. Mass
Q
/Q
peak
Q=
Triangular
0.6
Point of
Inflection
Tc
0.4
qp=
654.33 x 2 x A x Q
T p +T r
qp=
484 A Q
Tp
0.2
0
0.0
Tp
1.0
Tb
2.0
3.0
T/Tpeak
4.0
5.0
Other Applications
What to do with storms of different
durations?
Other Applications
Physically-Based Distributed
TOPMODEL
TOPMODEL
Surface saturation and soil moisture
deficits based on topography
Slope
Specific Catchment Area
Topographic Convergence
TOPMODEL
Recognizes that topography is the
dominant control on water flow
Predicts watershed streamflow by
identifying areas that are topographically
similar, computing the average subsurface
and overland flow for those regions, then
adding it all up. It is therefore a quasidistributed model.
Key Assumptions
from Beven, Rainfall-Runoff Modeling
Hillslope Element
P
a
c
asat
qoverland
qsubsurface
asat
qoverland
qsubsurface
Recall that one goal of TOPMODEL is to simplify the data required to run a watershed
model.
We know that subsurface flow is highly dependent on the vertical distribution of K. We
can not easily measure K at depth, but we can measure or estimate K at the surface.
We can then incorporate some assumption about how K varies with depth (equation
9.7). From equation 9.7 we can derive an expression for T based on surface K (9.9).
Note that z is now the depth to the water table.
a
c
asat
qoverland
qsubsurface
asat
D
qsubsurface
Equations
Subsurface
Surface
Topographic Index
Saturation Deficit
Element as a function of local TI
Catchment Average