Search results for "Sloping channel"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Sequent Depth Ratio of a B-Jump

2011

A B-jump is defined as the jump having the toe section located on a positively sloping upstream channel and the roller end on a downstream horizontal channel. This jump often occurs in the stilling basins with a horizontal bottom and located downstream of a steep channel. For a B-jump, a completely theoretical approach is not sufficient to solve the momentum equation and to establish the sequent depth ratio. In this paper, by using the laboratory measurements carried out in this investigation, some available empirical relationships useful for estimating the sequent depth ratio are tested. Then, by using the Π theorem of the dimensional analysis and the incomplete self-similarity theory, a g…

Sloping channelEnergy dissipationMechanical EngineeringGeometryDissipationType (model theory)Hydraulic jumpOpen channel flowOpen-channel flowsymbols.namesakeCalculusJumpFroude numbersymbolsSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliMomentum-depth relationship in a rectangular channelHydraulic jumpWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringCommunication channelMathematicsJournal of Hydraulic Engineering
researchProduct

Sequent depth ratio of B-jumps on smooth and rough beds

2013

A hydraulic B-jump has the toe section located on a positively sloping upstream channel and the roller end on a downstream horizontal channel. This paper analyses the B-jump on a rough bed, such as at the transition from a block ramp to the stilling basin. Laboratory measurements of the sequent depth were carried out using three different channel slopes for the rough bed and a single slope for the smooth bed. A solution useful for estimating the sequent depth ratio in a rectangular channel for different relative roughness and bed slope is proposed and positively tested by the present measurements. This solution can also be used to estimate the sequent depth ratio of classical hydraulic jump…

lcsh:Agricultureopen channel flow hydraulic jump energy dissipation sloping channel bed roughness.roughnejumpMechanical Engineeringlcsh:SBioengineeringopen channel flowlcsh:Agriculture (General)lcsh:S1-972hydraulicIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringJournal of Agricultural Engineering
researchProduct