A comparison of three dual drainage models: shallow water vs local inertial vs diffusive wave

Author:

Martins Ricardo12,Leandro Jorge32,Chen Albert S.4,Djordjević Slobodan4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Structural Engineering, S1 3JD University of Sheffield, Mappin Building, Sheffield, UK

2. MARE – Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, Department of Civil Engineering, FCT, University of Coimbra, Coimbra 3004-517, Portugal and IMAR – Institute of Marine Research, Department of Civil Engineering, FCT, University of Coimbra, Coimbra 3004-517, Portugal

3. Department of Civil, Geo and Environmental Engineering, Chair of Hydrology and River Basin Management, Technical University of Munich, Arcisstrasse 21, Munich 80333, Germany

4. Centre for Water Systems, University of Exeter, North Park Road, Exeter EX4 4QF, UK

Abstract

In this study we compared three overland flow models, a full dynamic model (shallow water equation), a local inertial equations model (gravity wave model), and a diffusive wave model (parallel diffusive wave model). The three models are coupled with the same full dynamic sewer network model (SIPSON). We adopted the volume exchange between sewer and overland flow models, and the hydraulic head and discharge rates at the linked manholes to evaluate differences between the models. For that purpose we developed a novel methodology based on RGB scale. The test results of a real case study show a close agreement between coupled models in terms of the extents of flooding, depth and volume exchanged, despite highly complex flows and geometries. The diffusive wave model gives slightly higher maximum flood depths and a slower propagation of the flood front when compared to the other two models. The local inertial model shows to a slight extent higher depths downstream as the wave front is slower than the one in the fully dynamic model. Overall, the simplified overland models can produce comparable results to fully dynamic models with less computational cost.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Civil and Structural Engineering,Water Science and Technology

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