6 research outputs found
The effects of initial soil moisture conditions on swale flow hydrographs
The effects of soil water content (SWC) on the formation of runâoff in grass swales draining into astorm sewer system were studied in two 30âm test swales with trapezoidal cross sections. Swale1 was built in a loamy fineâsand soil, on a slope of 1.5%, and Swale 2 was built in a sandy loam soil,on a slope of 0.7%. In experimental runs, the swales were irrigated with 2 flow rates reproducing runâoff from block rainfalls with intensities approximately corresponding to 2âmonth and 3âyear events. Runâoff experiments were conducted for initial SWC (SWCini) ranging from 0.18 to 0.43 m3/m3. For low SWCini, the runâoff volume was greatly reduced by up to 82%, but at highSWCini, the volume reduction was as low as 15%. The relative swale flow volume reductions decreased with increasing SWCini and, for the conditions studied, indicated a transition of the dominating swale functions from runâoff dissipation to conveyance. Runâoff flow peaks were reduced proportionally to the flow volume reductions, in the range from 4% to 55%. The swale outflow hydrograph lag times varied from 5 to 15 min, with the high values corresponding tolow SWCini. Analysis of swale inflow/outflow hydrographs for high SWCini allowed estimations of the saturated hydraulic conductivities as 3.27 and 4.84 cm/hr in Swales 1 and 2, respectively. Such estimates differed from averages (N = 9) of doubleâring infiltrometer measurements (9.41 and 1.78 cm/hr). Irregularities in swale bottom slopes created bottom surface depression storage of 0.35 and 0.61 m3 for Swales 1 and 2, respectively, and functioned similarly as check bermscontributing to runâoff attenuation. The experimental findings offer implications for drainage swale planning and design: (a) SWCini strongly affect swale functioning in runâoff dissipation and conveyance during the early phase of runâoff, which is particularly important for design storms and their antecedent moisture conditions, and (b) concerning the longevity of swale operation, Swale 1 remains fully functional even after almost 60 years of operation, as judged from its attractive appearance, good infiltration rates (3.27 cm/hr), and high flow capacity.Validerad;2018;NivĂ„ 2;2018-02-28 (svasva)</p