HEC-RAS Tutorial Flume Example
HEC-RAS Tutorial Flume Example
A Tutorial
(Model Development of a Small Flume)
HEC-RAS
• Hydraulic Engineering Center:River
Analysis System
• 1-D step backwater model
• Utilizes energy equation to compute water
surface elevation for a given discharge,
geometry, and resistance
Organizational Structure
• Open project –creates (.prj file)
• Includes:
1. Unit system (SI/US customary)
2. Geometry (XS, bridges, weirs, etc.) (.g file)
3. Flow Data (steady, unsteady) (.f file)
4. Plan data(what combination of flow/geometry to
use for the analysis) (.p file)
Open a new project
Name the project (.prj file)
After you have entered the above, click O.K. and O.K. again
Select SI units
Geometry Files (.g)
• Create a reach- single or dendritic
Click here
Create a new
river reach
Draw the reach upstream to downstream
Double click to end
Name the river and reach
Geometry
• Cross sections define the channel/flume geometry
• Cross sections are defined by Station(x) and elevation (y) in the plane of the
cross section perpendicular to the flow
• River station, downstream reach length and cross section thalweg elevation
define the channel slope
• Overbank stations differentiate channel and floodplain characteristics
• Resistance to flow is defined by Manning n coefficients for both the channel
and floodplain
• Expansion and contraction coefficients define energy losses associated with
velocity head changes between cross sections
• Ineffective flow areas are can store but not convey water downstream
• Obstruction areas block flow completely
• Levee elevations confine flow to channel until the levees are overtopped
More geometry
• Junctions define where two reaches are connected
• Bridges and culverts
• Inline weirs/gates
• Off channel storage
• Pumping stations
• All can be modeled with a reasonable amount of
detail (can be covered at a later date)
Flume example
• Width- 7.57 cm (0.0757 m)
• Wall height- 12 cm( 0.12 m)
• Flume Length- 182 cm (1.82 m)
• Slope-none , horizontal
• Roughness- Plexiglass (n~0.0085)
• Discharge- 1.5 l/s ( 0.0015 m3/s)
• Cross section spacing –10 cm (0.1 m)
• Downstream boundary condition (critical depth at
outlet, free overfall)
Enter cross section data
Click
Add a new cross section
Start at downstream river station 0.00 m
(HEC RAS ESTABLISHES THE DOWN STREAM END AS ZERO
FOR A STARTING DISTANCE AN PROGRESSIVELY WORKS UP
STREAM IN CHAINAGE)
Enter and apply data assuming an arbitrary datum of
100.00 m, notice the downstream reach length is zero
since we are at the furthest downstream extent of the
model Cross-sectional data
- Entered from left to right looking down stream
Enter desired
description of the
cross section
Adobe
Creek
Example
Since the geometry is uniform from the upstream to
downstream extent, we can make use of the cross section
interpolation tool to compute the geometry with the specified
cross section spacing
LOB
1.82m
CHANNEL
ROB
1.82m
Sections On Skews
1.73m
LOB
1.82m
CHANNEL
ROB
1.91m
Now it’s time to interpolate cross sections…In the main
geometry menu click on tools/XS interpolation and select
between two cross-sections
Enter 0.1 m as the max distance between XS’s, then hit the interpolate
button and your geometry is complete
If you continued to have different cross sectional geometry
at each cross-section, you would continue to add new cross-
sections and enter the distances between each section.
Your main geometry menu should now look like this
Click
Let’s consider 3 flows 0.5,1.0, and 5 liter/s
Enter and apply the data
Now we are going to change the profile names (from PF 1, PF2, PF3)
-On the “steady flow data window”
- Chose options / edit profile names
100.11
Releative Elevation (m)
100.10
100.09
100.08
100.07
OBSERVED DATA
100.06
HEC RAS Model (Best fit)
100.05
100.04
100.03
100.02
100.01
100.00
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8
CHAINAGE (m)