27 research outputs found

    Hydraulic model studies

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    CER62EVR18.Series statement and numbering from publisher's list.Includes bibliographical references (page 13).Stage-discharge relations for two artificial controls were determined in a model study conducted at Colorado State University. The controls are used to measure the discharge at two gaging stations (Cibecue Ridge No. 1 and Cibecue Ridge No. 2), that form a part of an intensive hydrologic investigation of the semi-arid environment of Central Arizona. The gaging stations are located in a remote area where the runoff is infrequent and of brief duration. The model studies were conducted because it was virtually impossible to calibrate the controls in the field. In addition to determining the stage-discharge relation, modifications in the controls are proposed to improve the discharge records for the two stations. A hydraulic jump occurs in the present controls at the section where the stage is measured. The hydraulic jump keeps the controls clear of the large sediment discharge of the streams, but causes large fluctuations of the water surface in the stilling wells. The modified controls eliminate the hydraulic jump, make extensive use of the construction that presently exists, will pass the sediment discharge of the streams, and have a fairly sensitive stage-discharge relation. The recorded elevation of the water surf ace in the stilling well lags the actual elevation of the stream because the connection between the control and the stilling well is too small in relation to the size of the stilling well. The lag can be decreased by replacing the present stilling well with a tube 14 to 20 inches in diameter

    Economic value of sediment discharge data

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    April 1974.Bibliography: pages 37-38.Financially supported by the Colorado State University Experiment Station

    Resistance to flow in alluvial channels

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    CER61DBS79.Includes bibliographical references.From: Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers, 1962

    Stream gaging control structure for the Rio Grande conveyance channel near Bernardo, New Mexico

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    CER61EVR42.June 1961.Includes bibliographical references (page 23)

    Dye dilution method of discharge measurement

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    January 1971.CER70-71WSL-EVR47.Includes bibliographical references.Council of U.S. Universities for Soil and Water Development in Arid and Sub-humid Areas.Prepared under support of United States Agency for International Development, AID/csd-2162, Water management research in arid and sub-humid lands of the less developed countries

    Forms of bed roughness in alluvial channels

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    CER60DBS3.January 1960.Includes bibliographical references

    Mechanics of soil erosion from overland flow generated by simulated rainfall

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    September 1973.Bibliography: pages 53-54

    Resistance to flow in alluvial channels

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    CER59DBS48.November 1959.Includes bibliographical references.Presented at the New York ASCE Convention, October, 1958.This paper presents the initial results of a flume study of alluvial channels currently being conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey at Colorado State University. A detailed classification of the regimes of flow, the forms of bed roughness, and the basic concepts pertaining to resistance to now are discussed

    Study of flow in alluvial channels: depth-discharge relations, A

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    CER59DBS34.Includes bibliographical references (page 42).Alluvial channel stage-discharge and depth-discharge relations were studied in a large sand bed-recirculating flume. From this study, it was found that the form of these relationships are intimately related to: 1. Regime of flow; 2. Form of bed roughness, a. Characteristics of the bed material, b. Concentration of fine sediment, c. Temperature; 3. Rate of change of discharge with time. In the range of shear where ripples and dunes develop on the bed, the stage-discharge curve for a rising stage is usually quite different from that for a falling stage. These curves are only valid for the conditions upon which they are based--no general solution is possible. In the range of shear, which develops plane bed, standing sand, and water waves, which are in phase, and antidunes, the rising and falling stage curves coincide and hold for all values of discharge associated with these forms of bed roughness. When a channel experiences a shear stress, which develops dunes at small discharges and plane bed and perhaps standing waves and antidunes at larger discharges, there is a discontinuity in the stage-discharge or depth-discharge curves particularly on the rising stage, which occurs when the dunes wash out. This is caused by the large reduction in resistance to flow, which occurs when the bed form changes from ripples or dunes to plane bed, standing waves, or antidunes, and the resultant reduction in depth even though discharge is increasing

    Some properties of water clay dispersions and their effect on flow

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    CER61WLH62.Includes bibliographical references.Fine sediments dispersed in water affect the apparent viscosity and specific weight of the resulting dispersion. Tests at 24 degrees centigrade with a Stormer viscosimeter showed that the apparent kinematic viscosity for a 10 percent by weight water-clay dispersion of an impure bentonite was 8.75 times greater than that of distilled water. A 10 percent water-kaolin dispersion was 1.40 times more viscous than distilled water. The change in viscosity and density of the water-fine sediment dispersion changes the fall velocity of the bed material. The fall velocity distribution of the bed material can be determined, as a first approximation, with the visual accumulation tube apparatus when water-clay dispersions are the sedimentation media. The results are comparable to the fall velocities computed by using the Reynolds number-drag relation, the measured viscosity of the water-clay dispersion and the density of the dispersion. Experiments conducted in water- sand flows with and without bentonite in the flumes at Colorado State University demonstrated that with bentonite in the flow the changes in fall velocity of the bed material particles, resulting from the changes in fluid properties, altered the bed configuration. Because the resistance to flow and bed-material transport are dependent on the form of the bed, they were appreciably affected. Generally, as concentration of fine sediment increases with a constant rate of stream flow, flow resistance and transport of bed material always increase in the upper flow regime and sometimes decrease in the lower flow regime
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