1. UNIT HYDROGRAPHS A unit hydrograph is a hydrograph for a given basin that is produced by a unit depth of effective rainfall (rainfall excess). There are several possible durations for that unit of rainfall depth; therefore, a given basin can have several unit hydrographs. Once a unit hydrograph has been determined for a given basin, say the X-hr unit hydrograph, other unit hydrographs for the same basin can be derived from this X-hr unit hydrograph following established procedures; either the method of superposition of the S-hydrograph method. A unit hydrograph embodies the diffusion properties of a basin, that is, the unit hydrograph is the means by which basin diffusion may be calculated. (In practice, basin diffusion is commonly referred to as basin storage). Steeper basins have less diffusion; milder basins have more diffusion. The main parameter of the unit hydrograph is the basin lag; the longer the lag, the more the diffusion. The peak flow of the unit hydrograph is inversely related to the basin lag; the longer the lag, the lesser the peak flow, and vice versa. Unit hydrographs can be derived from rainfall-runoff data. However, the procedure is time-consuming and it is limited to gaged basins, which are comparatively small in number. 2. SNYDER'S SYNTHETIC UNIT HYDROGRAPH A synthetic unit hydrograph retains all the features of the unit hydrograph, but does not require rainfall-runoff data. A synthetic unit hydrograph is derived from theory and experience, and its purpose is to simulate basin diffusion by estimating the basin lag based on a certain formula or procedure.
The first synthetic unit hydrograph was developed by
Snyder in 1938.1
In order to provide sufficient flexibility for simulating a wide range of diffusion amounts,
Snyder formulated his method in terms of two parameters: (1) a time
parameter Ct, and (2) a peak parameter Cp.
3. NRCS SYNTHETIC UNIT HYDROGRAPH In 1954, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service followed Snyder in developing a synthetic unit hydrograph suited for agency use.2 Since NRCS applications typically involved smaller basins, that is, less than 10 square miles, they chose to set the peak parameter at a fixed ratio of triangular-time-base to time-to-peak Tbt/tp = 8/3. For comparison, in the rational method, this ratio is exactly 2, i.e., no diffusion. Therefore, NRCS introduced some diffusion into their synthetic unit hydrograph, but clearly not a lot. The diffusion is fixed by the 8/3 parameter, and it is certainly less than Snyder's, who unlike NRCS, could vary its diffusion, within certain limits. The NRCS synthetic unit hydrograph is generally justified because the NRCS basins were typically relatively small, and small basins usually do not exhibit a great amount of diffusion. However, caution is advised when attempting to use the NRCS procedure for larger and/or milder basins. In this case, the use of the NRCS unit hydrograph will very likely result in overestimation of the peak flows.
4. USBR SYNTHETIC UNIT HYDROGRAPHS
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has developed a series of synthetic unit hydrographs
applicable to regions within its jurisdiction.3
These regions are:
(1) Great Plains, (2) Rocky Mountains, The USBR methodology reveals that the basins tend to vary widely in their diffusion properties. This confirms the wide range of basin scales and topographic features that characterizes the regions of the Western United States.
5. GENERAL DIMENSIONLESS UNIT HYDROGRAPH The general dimensionless unit hydrograph (GDUH) is yet another way of formulating a synthetic unit hydrograph.5 The procedure is based on the cascade of linear reservoirs, a conceptual model which simulates basin response by routing watershed/basin flows through a series of linear reservoirs. The method has two parameters: the Courant number C and the number N of linear reservoirs. The cascade of linear reservoirs may be readily nondimensionalized, leading to the GDUH (Ponce, 2010). The procedure renders the methodology independent of the basin area and unit hydrograph duration, confirming its global applicability. Once the two parameters, the Courant number and the number of linear reservoirs, are chosen, a unique synthetic general dimensionless unit hydrograph (GDUH) is obtained.
6. CONCLUDING REMARKS
1 Snyder, F. F. 1938. Synthetic Unit-Graphs. Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 19, 447-454. 2 USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service. 1954, revised 1985. National Engineering Handbook, Section 4: Hydrology, Washington, D.C. (Republished as Part 630: Hydrology). 3 U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. 1987. Design of Small Dams. 3rd edition, Denver, Colorado. 4 Ponce, V. M. 1989. Engineering Hydrology, Principles and Practices. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey. 5 Ponce, V. M. 2009. A general dimensionless unit hydrograph. 6 Ponce, V. M. 2009. Cascade and convolution: One and the same. |
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