Adil ppt-3
Adil ppt-3
Adil ppt-3
PRESENTED BY
Adil Ahmad Wani
ROLL NO. CE-14-09
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION TO DAMS
SITE SELECTION,PRELIMINARY AND FINAL SITE
INVESTIGATION
RIGID DAMS: BASIC DESIGN PRINCIPLES
EMBANKMENT DAMS: DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS
SPILLWAYS, TYPES OF SPILLWAYS, SPILLWAY GATES
INTRODUCTION
A dam is a structure built across a river to create a
reservoir on its upstream side for impounding water.
Dams serve the purpose of retaining water,
navigation, irrigation, etc.
Dams are generally constructed in the mountainous
reach of the river where the valley is narrow and
foundation is good.
SITE SELECTION
1.TOPOGRAPHICALLY
Narrow gorge or small valley with enough
catchment areas so that length of dam is small and
capacity is large.
Riverbed should be high to reduce the cost and
height of dam.
In case of confluence of two rivers, dam should be
located on downstream side.
2.TECHNICALLY
There must exist suitable foundation. If not available
improvement costs to make suitable foundation
should not be excessive.
The site must be impermeable so that maximum
desired amount of water is stored.
Stability with reference to seismic shocks and slope
failures around the dam are a great relief to the
public as well as engineering.
3.CONSTRUCTIONALLY
Dam should not be far away from deposit of
materials.
Natural materials of construction like earth, sand,
gravel, and rock should be easily available
otherwise cost will increase.
4.ECONOMICALLY
Benefits arising should be realistic and justified in
terms of land irrigated or power generated or floods
averted or water stored.
5.ENVIRONMENTALLY
Surrounding of the site should be healthy and free from
mosquitoes.
Site of dam should not involve ecological disorder (in
the life of plants, animals and man).
PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION
Preliminary surveys should include all details of
site.They need not to be precise but should be
accurate enough to prepare topographical maps of site
L-section and cross section of the river.
Geological studies include determination of
overburden and nature of rock.
Hydrological data regarding the possible runoff, yield
maximum discharge, HFL is collected.
FINAL INVESTIGATIONS
Land required for dam and other structures is
demarcated. Land likely to be submerged is also
marked. Alternatively arrangement for the people
affected is planned.
Final design, estimate and location. All information and
estimate is collected including information needed by
construction engineers.
RIGID DAMS
They are constructed with materials such as stone
masonary, steel, concrete or timber.
TYPES OF RIGID DAMS
1.GRAVITY DAM
2.ARCH DAM
3.BUTTRESS DAM
4.TIMBER DAM
FORCES ACTING ON DAM
Weight Of The Dam: In gravity dams and embankment
dam the weight of the dam is the major force acting for
holding the water back on the upstream side. The forces
arising due to the weight of the dam are compressive in
nature.
Water Pressure: The dam is required to resist horizontal
forces acting due to weight of the water impounded on
it. This water pressure can be calculated by
hydrostatic pressure distribution.
Earthquake Forces: The disturbance in dams is highly
dangerous because they store huge volumes of water. Dams
built in the areas known to be seismically active must be
designed to withstand additional forces that are likely to
arise in a future shock.
DESIGN CONSIDERATION
It shall be safe against overturning at any horizontal
position within the dam at the contact with the
foundation or within the foundation.
It should be safe against sliding at any horizontal plane
within the dam, at the contact with the foundation or
along any geological feature within the foundation.
The section should be so proportional that the allowable
stresses in both the concrete and the foundation should
not exceed.
Primary loads are identified as universally applicable and
of prime importance of the load.
Secondary loads are generally discretionary and of lesser
magnitude like sediment load or thermal stresses due to
mass concreting.
Exceptional loads are designed on the basis of limited
general applicability or having low probability of
occurrence like inertial loads associated with seismic
activity.
The forces that give stability to the dam include:
1. Weight of the dam
2. Thrust of the tail water
The forces that try to destabilize the dam include:
1. Reservoir water pressure
2. Uplift
3. Forces due to waves in the reservoir
4. Ice pressure
5. Temperature stresses
6. Silt pressure
7. Seismic forces
EMBANKMENT DAMS
It is typically created by the placement and compactions
of a complex semi-plastic mound of various compositions
of soil, clay or rock.
They may be of two types: earth- filled dam made of
compacted earth and rock-filled dam.
EMBANKMENT DAM
BASIC COMPONENTS OF AN EARTH DAM