Lecture 8
Lecture 8
Conical cups
5 CURRENT METER METHOD
Price Current Meter
In shallow water meter is mounted on a rod as the observer wades through the
stream and notes down number of revolutions
6 CURRENT METER METHOD
7 CURRENT METER METHOD
Propeller type Current Meter
In this type a propeller rotates about a horizontal
axis
Contacting mechanism is same
Sediment may entrap in the bearing
All the measurement procedure remains the same
Contact
Chamber
Wading Rod
Propellers
Foot Plate
8 CURRENT METER METHOD
Propeller type Current Meter
9 CURRENT METER MEASUREMENTS
Q= A x V
V
Velocity
Depth
Mean Velocity:
Average of the velocities at 2 tenths and
8 tenths depth below water
Or is equal to 6 tenths below the water
surface
Velocity Measurements:
Six-tenths depth (Shallow Flows)
Two point method (Deep Flows)
Three Point method (very deep flows)
12 CURRENT METER MEASUREMENTS
Steps
Divide the entire cross-section in 20-30 vertical sections (Qi <10% Q)
Measure total depth(D) at a point, by sounding with meter cable
Air Line
Take meter to 0.2D depth start the stop watch on an impulse and count number of revolutions and stop the
stop watch at the next impulse by current meter (about 45 seconds later).
Current meter can be Set to give impulse at 1, 10, 20, or 40 revolutions. Ѳ
Water Surface
V=a + b N, N is revolution per sec, and a, b are calibrating constant for the current meter. If R are the no of
revolutions measured in t sec, then N = R/t
Place the current meter to 0.8D depth below the water surface and measure number of revolutions and time
for the reolutions
Stream bed
In shallow waters only one velocity measurement is sufficient at 0.6D depth
If velocities are higher, current meter and sounding weight will not be able to hang vertically below the Stream having strong current
point of suspension
Under this condition meter is higher than indicated depth
Apply Correction
Ѳ=12o Error 2 %
13 CURRENT METER MEASUREMENTS
Steps
Compute average velocity in each vertical section
or
and N are counted revolutions per second and rating curves are developed
400’
V= a + b N 6’
2 1 0.6 10 50
4 3.5 2.8 22 55
0.7 35 52
6 5.2 4.2 28 53
1 40 58
9 6.3 5 32 58
1.3 45 60
11 4.4 3,5 28 45
0.9 33 46
13 2.2 1.3 22 50
0.5 12 49
15 0.8 0.5 12 49
17 0 0 0 0
17 NUMERICAL PROBLEM
V = a + bN (ft/s) a=0.1
b=2.2
Distance Depth Meter Revolutions Time N (Rev/Sec) V (ft/sec) Vmean Width of Area of Q= a . Vmean
from bank (ft) Depth (ft) (sec) (ft/sec) section (ft) section (ft2)
(ft)
71.51
Sum 52.55
18 NUMERICAL PROBLEM
Results:
Q= 71.36 Cfs
Vmean = = =1.36 ft/s
Dmean = = = 3.09 ft
19 METHODS OF DISCHARGE
MEASUREMENTS
By construction of regular structures
Spillways, sluice gates, turbine gates
Weirs and notches
Flumes (Parshal Flume, Venturi Flume)
Highway culverts
20 WEIRS AND NOTCHES
Reach Characteristics:
No loss or gain of water in the reach
Mixing must be complete at the sampling station
Wide channels and reaches with bifurcation should be avoided
Pools of dead water zones should be avoided
A reach where turbulence is high is to be preferred, bends narrows and water falls are good aids for
mixing.
Common Tracers used
Salt solutions
Radioactive tracers
Fluorescent dyes
27 DILUTION METHOD FOR DISCHARGE
MEASUREMENT
Injection methods:
Sudden Injection
Constant rate of injection
Sudden Injection
In this method a known volume V of the dozing solution or tracer is added to the stream as
rapidly as possible
Sample are then taken at regular intervals of time and chemical concentration
A curve is plotted between time and concertation called as Time-concentration curve
28 DILUTION METHOD FOR DISCHARGE
MEASUREMENT
Sudden Injection
Concentration
𝑡 Time
𝐴𝑟𝑒𝑎=∫ 𝐶 2 . 𝑑𝑡
0
29 DILUTION METHOD FOR DISCHARGE
MEASUREMENT
Sudden Injection
Q= rate of flow of stream
C0=concentration of chemical in dozing solution
C1=concentration of chemical occurring naturally in stream water
C2=concentration of chemical in water at sampling point
V= Volume of injected dozing solution
According to continuity equation Co >> C2 > C1
(Co – C1).V = Q
Q=
As Co >> C2 > C1 𝑡
The solution is diluted by a known dilution ratio “N” to give a standard solution of concentrations C 3
to use in measuring techniques
So for low concentration
In direction of flow:
VP V
Transducer
A boat traverses the stream at constant speed on a course normal to the flow
A special meter operates continuously and indicates the instantaneous velocity
Echo-sounder measures the cross-section of the stream during the traversing (30-40 points
measurements)
Several traverses are made and averaged
Using this velocity and cross section data discharge is calculated for the stream
37 STAGE-DISCHARGE RELATIONS
Rating Curve
Dispersion of the measured data should be <2% (standard deviation)
Larger dispersion indicates
Control shifts more or less continuously (scour, deposition and growth of vegetation)
Water surface slope varies at the control as a result of backwater
Measurements are not carefully made
38 EXTENSION OF RATING CURVE
1. logarithmic method
2. A method
39 EXTENSION OF RATING CURVE
Logarithmic Method:
It is assumed that the equation of rating curve is
Q= k (H-a)b
Where
H= gage height
a=vertical distance between the channel bed and arbitrary datum
a, b, k= station constants
“a” is determined doing several trials to get a straight line on log~log graph.
By plotting Q curve on a logarithmic paper and trying various values of ‘a’ unless we get a straight line.
Log Q = Log k + b Log (H-a)
Log k is vertical intercept, and b is slope of that straight line on log~log graph.
40 EXTENSION OF RATING CURVE
Q
A method
Q= A.C
C= roughness coefficient
S= Slope of energy line A
A= Cross- sectional area
R= Hydraulic radius = (For very wide channels)
If C is assumed to be constant for the station and D the mean
depth
Q= C. xA.
H
Q ( Straight Line)
Known values of Q and A. are plotted on a graph, which is
usually a straight line which can be extended
41 UNITS OF STREAM FLOW
Discharge units
Cusec = ft3/s =second-ft = cfs
Cumecs= m3/s
Volume units
Cubic ft =cft
Sfd = cfs- day (vol. of water collected in one day at a rate of 1 cusec)
Sfh
Acre-ft ( vol. of runoff when it is spread over an acre of area and 1’ depth)
1 acre-ft = 43560 ft3
Inches or cm of runoff (volume when 1” water is spread throughout the area)
Millions of meter cube= ??? Sfd?
Water year = 1st oct-30th sep