Functional Relationships of Resistance in Wide Flood Plains with Rigid Unsubmerged Vegetation
Publication: Journal of Hydraulic Engineering
Volume 132, Issue 2
Abstract
The effect of rigid, unsubmerged vegetation on flow resistance in wide flood plains was examined in this study. A series of experiments was run using rigid rods inserted into the flow field of a wide shallow flume. Several configurations of rod diameters with various lateral and longitudinal spacing were tested over a range of discharge values. Head losses across the rods were measured and a resistance-to-momentum-absorbing area concept was employed to relate density parameters to the resistance coefficient. The effects of flow depth, velocity, rod diameter , lateral spacing , and longitudinal spacing were estimated. The results demonstrated that flow resistance is greatly impacted by both depth and velocity but that the effects are opposite in sign. The friction factor increased in only a slightly nonlinear fashion with depth, but it decreased in a highly nonlinear manner with increasing velocity, and the velocity effects were very sensitive to vegetation density parameters. Of the density parameters tested, the effects of diameter and lateral spacing were far more significant than are those of longitudinal spacing. The results also demonstrated that the effects of all parameters (density and depth) could be effectively combined into one relative density ratio (total vegetation stomatal area/bed cross sectional area) that was linearly related to the Darcy and the Manning .
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Acknowledgments
This project was supported through a grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation “Applications of Remote Sensing and Related Spatial Technologies to Environmental Assessments in Transportation.” The assistance of the project manager, Dr. Roger King of Mississippi State University, and the USDOT program director, Dr. K. Thirumalai, is gratefully acknowledged.
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© 2006 ASCE.
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Received: Jul 7, 2003
Accepted: May 12, 2005
Published online: Feb 1, 2006
Published in print: Feb 2006
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