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Energy Dissipation in Hydraulic Structures (Paperback)
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Energy Dissipation in Hydraulic Structures (Paperback)
Series: IAHR Monographs
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Recent advances in technology have permitted the construction of
large dams, reservoirs and channels. This progress has necessitated
the development of new design and construction techniques,
particularly with the provision of adequate flood release
facilities. Chutes and spillways are designed to spill large water
discharges over a hydraulic structure (e.g. dam, weir) without
major damage to the structure itself and to its environment. At the
hydraulic structure, the flood waters rush as an open channel flow
or free-falling jet, and it is essential to dissipate a very
signifi cant part of the flow kinetic energy to avoid damage to the
hydraulic structure and its surroundings. Energy dissipation may be
realised by a wide range of design techniques. A number of modern
developments have demonstrated that such energy dissipation may be
achieved (a) along the chute, (b) in a downstream energy
dissipator, or (c) a combination of both. The magnitude of
turbulent energy that must be dissipated in hydraulic structures is
enormous even in small rural and urban structures. For a small
storm waterway discharging at a 4 m3/s mm high drop, the turbulent
kinetic energy flux per unit time is 120 kW! At a large dam, the
rate of energy dissipation can exceed tens to hundreds of
gigawatts; that is, many times the energy production rate of
nuclear power plants. Many engineers have never been exposed to the
complexity of energy dissipator designs, to the physical processes
taking place and to the structural challenges. Several energy
dissipators, spillways and storm waterways failed because of poor
engineering design. It is believed that a major issue affecting
these failures was the lack of understanding of the basic turbulent
dissipation processes and of the interactions between free-surface
aeration and flow turbulence. In that context, an authoritative
reference book on energy dissipation in hydraulic structures is
proposed here. The book contents encompass a range of design
techniques including block ramps, stepped spillways, hydraulic jump
stilling basins, ski jumps and impact dissipators.
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