Hydraulics Flashcards
Subcritical Flow
Actual flow»_space; critical depth
Low velocity and high depth
Downstream of hydraulic jump
Culvert outlet flow
Fr < 1 (slow, tranquil, deep)
Supercritical Flow
Actual Flow «_space;Critical depth
high velocity and low depth
Upstream of hydraulic jump
Culvert inlet flow
Fr > 1 (fast, rapid, shallow)
1 cfs = how many gal/min?
1 cfs = 448 gal/min
Weirs
Usually subcritical flow upstream, supercritical flow downstream
Sharp crested weirs = small flows, short in direction of flow
Cipoletti weir = horizontal broad weir with side slope 1 to 4
Q is function of head over weir to width of weir
Hydraulic Radius if pipe is flowing full? Half full?
Full and half full: D/4
Circular Pipe Sizing
Hydraulic radius is max when d/D = 0.81
Velocity is greatest at 81%
Q of half full channel is 50% of same channel when full
Q is max at 92% depth
Culvert Inlet Control
Flow Capacity controlled by: Headwater, flow area at inlet, type of inlet
Always partially full
Critical depth occurs at inlet
Slope usually steep
Supercritical thru culvert
Culvert Outlet Control
Flow Capacity controlled by: culvert diamter, area, materia, roughness, slope, tailwater, headwater, flow area at inlet, type of inlet edge
Full or partially full
“Free” = tailwater is equal to or lower than critical depth
Subrticial thru culvert
Unit Hydrographs
Hydrograph from unit of EXCESS rainfall
Most reliable method for predicting floods of any frequency
Duration of runoff does not depend on rainfall depth
Rainfall is spatially uniform over watershead area
Runoff is linearly related to rainfall
does NOT consider base flow
Hydrostatic Pressure –> 1 psi of pressure = how many ft of head?
1 psi of pressure = 2.31 ft of head
Pipes in Parallel
Pipes are split
Q is sum of all flow components
Flow in = flow out, but have to add each pipe split
Head loss across all branches is same regardless of roughness or length
Flow divides itself so head loss is equal in each branch (not necessarily same flow in each branch)
Buoyancy
Buoyancy is equal to the weight of the displaced fluid
Most Efficient Channel Geometries
Cross section that has the minimum wetted perimeter
Circle is the most efficient shape
Rectangle: depth that is half the width
Most likely questions on test:
Partially full circular channel flow
Sizing of circular pipes
Water balance equations
Runoff - Rational Method
Bernoulli Equation