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Hydro Final Output

The document discusses a drainage system study aimed at addressing flooding and erosion issues on a campus. It outlines the objectives, framework, and methodology for analyzing drainage problems, emphasizing the importance of effective water management in civil engineering. The conclusion highlights the development of software to simulate controlled drainage systems and the impact of soil properties on flood mitigation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

Hydro Final Output

The document discusses a drainage system study aimed at addressing flooding and erosion issues on a campus. It outlines the objectives, framework, and methodology for analyzing drainage problems, emphasizing the importance of effective water management in civil engineering. The conclusion highlights the development of software to simulate controlled drainage systems and the impact of soil properties on flood mitigation.

Uploaded by

pvtn2jkym4
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DRAINAGE SYSTEM

FINAL OUTPUT
HYDRAULICS LABORATORY 2

SUBMITTED BY: SUBMITTED TO:


ANGELES, KRISTINA CASSANDRA H. ENGR. PATRICK FRANCIS MALLARI
BUAN, JADE M.
CAGUIAT, ALECSANDRA E CE-403CEM
MARIMLA, KAYLA P.
VERGARA, PIA VANESSA S. MAY 11, 2022
OUTLINE:
• INTRODUCTION
• OBJECTIVE
• FRAMEWORK
• METHODOLOGY
• CONCLUSION
INTRODUCTION

• Drainage is a term for technical measures handling excess


water caused by rain, seepage, excess irrigation water, and
wastewater of households, by flowing, drain, discard, absorb,
as well as other businesses, with the ultimate goal to restore
or improve function region. In general, the drainage system is
a series of waterworks which serves to reduce and or remove
excess water from an area (Tanudjaya, 2008)
OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
• The objectives of the study work shall cover all the vital aspect
of the drainage problems system. The first stage of this project
work shall include the reconnaissance survey of the area
covered by the campus, nothing the land scope and modal
points ways, the effects of flood and erosion more prevalent,
the catchments area and tributaries of the storms water that
constitute the major part of the erosion and flood because it is
quite noticeable that during the raining seasons that most of
the road leading to campus and within the campus becomes in-
accessible for motorists and part of the building, lecture rooms
are highly flooded.
FRAMEWORK

• Water drainage as an elemental part of Civil Engineering Construction


plays an importance role which makes it very significant when it
comes to the act of practicing maintenance culture.
• Resolving a water drainage system involves a lot of activities
especially where the water drainage is to control excessive flooding or
where it is to be designed for waterlogged area. The designing water
drainage system there is need to anticipate the position of future
structure erections so as not to hinder the aesthetic nature of future
construction process.
• In the study of Kishore, M. V., & Garg, A. (2011) A list of major
waterlogged areas and probable causes in the City of
Dehradun were provided. These are the following: Undersized
drains, Inadequate size of drains, Obstruction to discharge
into roadside drain, Improper side drains, Encroachment on
drain, and Lack of proper drains. The paper proposed
drainage system for Dehradun City. Since the City is a sloping
town, this will be an advantage for drainage planning.
METHODOLOGY
System analysis in view of dual drainage modeling. In regard to dual drainage
modeling, urban drainage systems comprise
- single drainage areas (roofs, streets, parking lots, etc.) where rainfall is transformed
into
effective runoff (rainfall excess) depending on surface characteristics;
- distinct surface drainage components, e.g. street gutters, that lead surface runoff to
the
underground sewer system via inlets;
- surface areas where surface flow might occur in case of surface flooding (e.g.
streets);
- underground sewers forming the sewer network (incl. manholes, control structures).
CONCLUSION
• This paper intends to present an easy-to-handle software to study
the behavior of controlled drainage systems. Its solution, however,
is based upon a fundamental transient equation as outlined in this
study. It considers a geometrically simplified drain field consisting
of a ditch collector with horizontal drainpipes as laterals on either
side. The program simulates the unsteady interaction between
changing groundwater table and the soil water content in the field
and the water table in the ditch affected by a weir.
• Results further indicate that flood mitigation by providing
refillable pore space prior to the expected arrival of flood
waves is highly dependent on soil properties. The model
yields insights into transient processes embracing all
interconnected. Controlled drainage also decreased
drainage outflows. Both average yields and yields
midway between the drainage ditches were analyzed for
all water management treatments.
THANK YOU SO
MUCH!!!

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