150 likes | 337 Views
Sensitivity analysis of hydraulic model to morphological changes and changes in flood inundation extent. Do channel changes affect flood extent?. J.S. Wong 1 , J. Freer 1 , P.D. Bates 1 , & D.A. Sear 2. 1 University of Bristol; 2 University of Southampton. Background and Motivation.
E N D
Sensitivity analysis of hydraulic model to morphological changes and changes in flood inundation extent Do channel changes affect flood extent? J.S. Wong1, J. Freer1, P.D. Bates1, & D.A. Sear2 1University of Bristol; 2University of Southampton
Background and Motivation • Flood inundation • focus on simulation of inundation areas and flow depths • influences of river geometry are neglected • Morphological change • increasing recognition of geomorphological impacts on flooding • vital but still uncertain • How do bed elevation changes influence flood extent during an extreme flood event?
Study Site - Cockermouth • Background • North West Cumbria, UK • one major river (River Derwent) and two tributaries (Rivers Cocker & Marron) – combined catchment area of 1235km2
Study Site - Cockermouth • Why Cockermouth? • extreme flood event in November 2009 • significant course change • deposition of debris on the floodplain
Data availability • 3 datasets of observed flood extent • Wrack marks • 0.15m Aerial photography • 1m TERRASAR-X imagery • presence of pre-and post-event morphological surveyed data
Model Setup • 1D-2D LISFLOOD-FP • inertial formulation of shallow water equations [Bates et al., 2010] • 20m resolution DEM extracted from LiDAR • gauged data as upstream boundary conditions • free downstream boundary condition • run for 167.75hrs, from 12:00 on 17th Dec to 23:45 on 20th Dec, 2009, across domain size of 100km2 • Monte Carlo simulations
Generation of Bed Elevation Scenarios • A simplified approach • initiation motion of grains at the bed, where shear stress exceeds critical shear stress • maximum erosion depth is defined as • focus on scouring effect, no deposition and lateral erosion
Conclusions • The channel friction is insensitive on the amount of water that flows out of bank • The entire valley floor is acting as a single channel unit in conveying the large flows • No significant changes in flood extent before and after the bed elevation changes, possibly due to constraints of valley wall • Further investigation on water depth • Potential flood extent differences in response to morphological changes when given smaller flood event • Potential errors in the specification of upstream gauged data
Future Work • A 2D morphological model (CAESAR-LISFLOOD) will be set up to fully account for the morphological changes to flood extent and water depth • Parameter space exploration of CAESAR-LISFLOOD to build up a modelling framework for identifying realistic morphological changes • Application of modelling framework using Cockermouth as test site for future climate scanerios
The End Questions and comments are welcome!