Open Channel Flow

1. Introduction

Open channel flow refers to the flow of a liquid (usually water) with a free surface exposed to the atmosphere. Unlike pipe flow, the flow is primarily driven by gravity rather than pressure.

Examples

  • Rivers and streams
  • Canals and irrigation channels
  • Drainage systems
  • Spillways in dams

2. Types of Open Channels

(a) Natural Channels

  • Rivers, streams
  • Irregular shape and roughness

(b) Artificial Channels

  • Canals, flumes
  • Designed shapes like rectangular, trapezoidal

3. Geometric Elements of Channel

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Key Parameters

  • Area (A): Cross-sectional flow area
  • Wetted Perimeter (P): Length in contact with water
  • Top Width (T): Width of free surface
  • Hydraulic Radius (R):

R=APR = \frac{A}{P}R=PAโ€‹

  • Hydraulic Depth (D):

D=ATD = \frac{A}{T}D=TAโ€‹

4. Types of Flow in Open Channels

(a) Based on Time

  • Steady Flow: Properties do not change with time
  • Unsteady Flow: Properties vary with time

(b) Based on Space

  • Uniform Flow: Depth and velocity constant along channel
  • Non-uniform Flow:
    • Gradually Varied Flow (GVF)
    • Rapidly Varied Flow (RVF)

5. Velocity Distribution

  • Velocity is maximum below the free surface (not exactly at surface due to air resistance)
  • Zero velocity at channel bed (no-slip condition)

6. Chezyโ€™s Formula

V=CRSV = C \sqrt{R S}V=CRSโ€‹

Where:

  • VVV = Velocity
  • CCC = Chezyโ€™s constant
  • RRR = Hydraulic radius
  • SSS = Slope of channel

7. Manningโ€™s Formula (Most Important)

V=1nR2/3S1/2V = \frac{1}{n} R^{2/3} S^{1/2}V=n1โ€‹R2/3S1/2

Where:

  • nnn = Manningโ€™s roughness coefficient
  • RRR = Hydraulic radius
  • SSS = Slope

8. Flow Regimes (Based on Reynolds Number)

Re=ฯVRฮผRe = \frac{\rho V R}{\mu}Re=ฮผฯVRโ€‹

  • Laminar Flow: Re<500Re < 500Re<500
  • Turbulent Flow: Re>2000Re > 2000Re>2000

9. Froude Number (Most Important in Open Channel)

Fr=VgDFr = \frac{V}{\sqrt{g D}}Fr=gDโ€‹Vโ€‹

Where:

  • DDD = Hydraulic depth

Flow Types

  • Subcritical Flow (Fr < 1) โ†’ Slow, deep flow
  • Critical Flow (Fr = 1) โ†’ Minimum energy condition
  • Supercritical Flow (Fr > 1) โ†’ Fast, shallow flow

10. Specific Energy

E=y+V22gE = y + \frac{V^2}{2g}E=y+2gV2โ€‹

Where:

  • yyy = Depth of flow

Key Concept

  • Minimum specific energy occurs at critical flow

11. Hydraulic Jump

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Definition

A sudden transition from supercritical flow to subcritical flow, causing a rise in water depth.

Features

  • Energy dissipation
  • Turbulence and mixing

Applications

  • Spillways
  • Energy dissipation structures

12. Uniform Flow in Channels

Occurs when:

  • Depth remains constant
  • Slope of channel = slope of energy line

Discharge:Q=Aร—VQ = A \times VQ=Aร—V

13. Most Economical Channel Section

Condition for maximum discharge (minimum cost):

  • For rectangular channel:

Width=2ร—Depth\text{Width} = 2 \times \text{Depth}

14. Applications of Open Channel Flow

  • Irrigation canals
  • Flood control systems
  • Sewer systems
  • Hydropower plants
  • River engineering

15. Key Points Summary

  • Open channel flow has a free surface
  • Driven by gravity
  • Manningโ€™s formula is most widely used
  • Froude number determines flow regime
  • Hydraulic jump is important for energy dissipation

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