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Sediment transport in wadi systems

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Limiting the diversion of coarser sediments. Locate intakes at ... Limit diversion when wadi flows high throttling ... minimise the diversion angle ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sediment transport in wadi systems


1
Sediment transport in wadi systems
  • Part 3 - Sediment management structures and canal
    design

phil.lawrence_at_sediment.plus.com
2
Summary sediment management strategy
  • Limit the diversion of coarser sediments
  • Transport fine sediments through canals to the
    fields
  • Make provision for the inevitable rise in command
    levels

3
Limiting the diversion of coarser sediments
  • Locate intakes at outside of bends
  • Sediment excluding intakes
  • Limit diversion when wadi flows high throttling
    structures or close gates
  • Secondary sediment control

4
Location of intakes at bends
  • The low flow channel carrying flood recession
    flows forms at the outside of a wadi bend.
    (Traditional intakes are placed at the outside of
    wadi bends for this reason.)
  • In floods bed load sweep will move the largest
    sediments towards the inside of a bend and away
    from an intake.

5
Bed load sweep at a channel bend
6
Traditional intake showing location at the
outside of a wadi bend
7
Limiting the diversion of coarser sediments
  • Locate intakes at outside of bends
  • Sediment excluding intakes
  • Limit diversion when wadi flows high throttling
    structures or close gates
  • Secondary sediment control

8
Example of a conventional sediment excluding
intake
9
Example of a spate sediment excluding intake
10
Features of the spate intake
  • No divide wall, flows can approach from any
    direction including parallel to the weir
  • Intake aligned to minimise the diversion angle
  • Curved channel with floor set lower than the
    intake gate sill encourages coarser sediments to
    move through the sluiceway
  • In this case a fuse plug was used

11
Limitations of sediment excluding intakes in
spate schemes
  • Spate intakes divert all the wadi flows except
    for the short periods, sometimes only minutes,
    during flood peaks when wadi flows exceed the
    intake capacity. Sediment exclusion only
    effective during these periods.
  • Sluice gates have to be operated in response to
    rapidly varying spate flows mechanised gates
    desirable but not often affordable.

12
Design of sediment excluding intakes -use of
physical and numerical models
  • Physical models of practical scale overestimate
    sediment excluding performance - not always made
    clear in reports from modelling organisations
  • Numerical modelling has the potential to make
    quantitative predictions of sediment exclusion
    without problems in representing a wide range of
    grain sizes.

13
Physical hydraulic model
14
3 D numerical Model to predict sediment exclusion
15
Variation of sediment exclusion with sediment size
16
Comparison of predictions

17
Simple intake model
  • The 3 d models described require considerable
    sediment transport and numerical modelling
    expertise to set up, calibrate, and run.
  • Simpler models are available that can be used to
    provide an indication of the sediment excluding
    performance of a basic intake. ( for example
    Sharc)

18
Basic intake
19
Example of output from simple model - impact of
sluicing discharge
20
Limiting the diversion of coarser sediments
  • Locate intakes at outside of bends
  • Sediment excluding intakes
  • Limit diversion when wadi flows high throttling
    structures or close gates
  • Secondary sediment control

21
Limit diversion from flood peaks
  • For simple un-gated intakes use flow throttling
    structures with a rejection spillway to limit the
    flows entering a canal.
  • For gated intakes consider closing canal gates
    during short periods of high flow. (There are
    problems of responding to rapidly varying flows,
    and farmers reluctance to waste water) Flow
    throttling structures with a rejection spillway
    are also used with gated intakes to ensure that
    canals are not damaged by excessive flows if the
    gates are left open during very large floods .

22
Limiting the diversion of coarser sediments
  • Locate intakes at outside of bends
  • Sediment excluding intakes
  • Limit diversion when wadi flows high throttling
    structures or close gates
  • Secondary sediment control

23
Secondary sediment control
  • Settling basins
  • Canal sediment extractors

24
Wadi Mawr settling basins
25
Desilting a small basin
26
Models are used design settling basins/gravel
traps
  • Model predictions include
  • Variation in sediment concentrations and grain
    sizes passing through a basin it fills with
    sediment.
  • Estimates of the frequency of sediment sluicing
    or de-silting operations.
  • The time period required to flush the basin and
    the volume of water needed for flushing.
  • The dimensions of an escape channel to convey
    sediment flushed from a basin to the river or
    disposal point.

27
Minimising trapping fine sediments
  • A disadvantage of settling basins in spate
    schemes is their high trap efficiency for fine
    sediments at low flows or when basins are empty.
  • To minimise the trap efficiency for fine
    sediments
  • Basins should be relatively narrow, with sediment
    storage obtained by increasing the length, rather
    than the width or depth of the basin.
  • If it is considered necessary substantial
    reductions in the trap efficiency for fine
    sediments can be made if the tail water level in
    the basin is lowered for very low basin
    discharges. One possibility is to provide a
    notched weir at the basin exit, so that tail
    water levels are substantially lowered when the
    basin discharge is very low.

28
Operating problems with flushed basins
29
Sediment extractors vortex tube
30
Sediment extractors vortex tube
31
Secondary sediment control for spate schemes
  • Settling basins Mechanically excavated or
    flushed basins can provide high sediment trap
    efficiencies with a low, or in the case of
    mechanically excavated basin, zero, wastage of
    water for sediment flushing. But sediment trap
    efficiency varies as a basin fills, and also with
    the basin discharge which varies from zero to
    full supply discharge in spate schemes.
  • Canal sediment extractors Trap coarse sediment
    with a relatively constant trap efficiency but
    require continuous flushing flows of between 10
    and 15 of the canal discharge. Conventional
    extractors not suitable for use in spate schemes.
  • These disadvantages are minimised in the hybrid
    system shown on the next slide.

32
Hybrid extractor/flushed basin for large schemes
33
Hybrid extractor/flushed basin for large schemes
  • This system proved to be extremely successful in
    scheme in Philippines with massive sedimentation
    problems - halting, and then reversing, a long
    term decline in the irrigation service area, and
    providing very large economic returns.

34
Spate canal design methods
  • no scouring no silting criteria not for
    spate
  • Regime design methods mostly for canals
    carrying low sediment loads but Simons and
    Albertson method include equations for canals
    with sand beds and cohesive banks, carrying
    heavy sediment loads have been used in spate
    systems
  • Rational methods provide the most logical method
    of designing canals to achieve a specified
    sediment transporting capacity. Chang, 1985
    method provides predictions of slopes and bed
    widths that are similar to that observed in many
    spate systems.

35
Comparison of predictions from Chang method with
slopes measured slope of a wadi Zabid canal
36
Use canal surveys to aid design in modernised
schemes
  • Canal designs in modernised schemes are best
    based on the slopes and cross sections of
    (stable) existing canals. Design of enlarged,
    extended or new canals can then be derived using
    the Chang equation, with a judicious choice of
    input parameters to provide a good match with the
    slopes and cross sections observed in existing
    canals.

37
Make provision for the inevitable rise in command
levels
  • Rise rates 5 mm to more than 50 mm year observed
    in spate schemes
  • For existing schemes estimate historical rates of
    rise of fields from coring or trial pits, and
    the history of upstream movement of traditional
    diversion structures.
  • For new schemes base on command increase in near
    by systems
  • If no local information available base estimates
    on regional catchment sediment yield data, the
    proportion of the annual sediment load that will
    be diverted to a scheme, the scheme command area,
    a bulk density for settled silts, and the likely
    variation in sedimentation rates between upstream
    and downstream fields. (In wadi Laba in Eritrea
    mean sedimentation rates in upstream fields were
    about twice the mean rate for all fields.)

38
Field rise rates in spate irrigated areas
39
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