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IMPACT PROJECT Flood Propagation Progress Review. 2 nd Impact Workshop Mo i Rana, Norway September 12-13, 2002. Francisco Alcrudo University of Zaragoza WP3 Theme Leader. Flood Propagation Theme Area Overview. Objectives Assess the accuracy of flood propagation models
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IMPACT PROJECTFlood PropagationProgress Review 2nd Impact Workshop Mo i Rana, Norway September 12-13, 2002 Francisco Alcrudo University of Zaragoza WP3 Theme Leader
Flood Propagation Theme Area Overview • Objectives • Assess the accuracy of flood propagation models • Gain insight into flow conditions in urban flooding escenarios • Adapt and develop techniques better suited for urban flood modelling • Improve flexibility and accuracy of flood wave propagation models in real topographies • Perform case studies on real scenarios and provide measures of uncertainty
Flood Propagation Overview • Methodology • Review modelling techniques • Develop specific strategies well suited to severe flooding (especially for urban scenarios) • Perform physical model experiments on: • local flood effects • global flooding conditions • Mathematical model benchmarking & improvement • Case studies: Model testing against real flood events
Methodology Minimise uncertainties Model development Experiments & Real Data Model improvement Benchmarking Assessment
Flood Propagation Overview • Work Plan • Urban flooding • Test modelling techniques for urban flood propagation • Coarse 2-D models, topography or friction based • 1-D network models • Detailed 2-D modelling • Model experiments on local effects • The Isolated building testcase • Flow patterns around single buildings, wave arrival, propagation and scattering
Flood Propagation Overview • Work Plan • Urban flooding (2) • Model experiments on building groupings • The Model city flooding experiment • Flow patterns in a simple model of a city/village • Case study • Model validation against actual city flooding data • To be determined
Flood Propagation Overview • Present status • Mathematical models for city fllooding being developed and tested based on: • Representation of bed topography incorporating building elevation • Detailed 2-D modelisation of urban geometry i.e. Meshing of city area taking buildings into account. • Decreased conveyance in urban areas through increased friction levels (to be developed) • 1-D modelisation of the city as a channel network (in development)
Flood Propagation Overview • Present status • The isolated building testcase • Data acquisition almost complete (vector field data pending) • Preliminary math model runs accomplished • Benchmarking process ready to be launched Details to be presented in a following presentation
Flood Propagation Overview • Present status • The model city flooding experiment • Data acquisition completed and closed • Data selection and sorting almost complete • Preliminary math model runs accomplished • Benchmarking process close to be launched • Case study • To be selected
The Model City Flooding Experiment ENEL – CRIS (Milano, Italy) 2nd Impact Workshop Mo i Rana, Norway September 12-13, 2002 F. Alcrudo, University of Zaragoza, WP3 Theme Leader
The Model City Flooding Experiment • Performed by ENEL at CRIS facilities in Milano • Test rig comprises a model city area in a larger physical model of a valley (1:100 scale) • Experiments on a simple model city/village heavy flooding scenario without building overtopping • Data produced comprise water levels versus time at 10 different probe locations
Only a small portion of the physical model is used • Almost flat bottom
Summary of experimental test program(in red chosen for modelling tests) • Bathymetry • Original valley (?) • Simplified (vertical side walls + flattened bed) • Building arrangement • Aligned • Staggered • Flood intensity (peak discharge) • 60 l/s (closer to real flooding conditions ?) • 80 l/s • 100 l/s
Bathymetry Original valley Simplified (vertical side walls) Flat bed Constant slope Interpolated original bed onto test area + Modellers options: Mesh, algorithm ... Inlet boundary conditions Imposed discharge S1 probe reading imposed as total head upsteam Building representation Increased friction level Bed modification Detailed 2-D meshing around buildings 1-D channel flow Summary of Modelling options
Input and output data will be distributed/collected via the project Web site Open to all groups/institutions willing to participate Experimental data available from scratch Modellers free to choose testcases to run with several cases common to all (compulsory) Benchmarking program features (preliminary)
Preliminary modelling results • Several runs were performed with three different modelling options on the simplified valley with aligned building lay out and 100 l/s peak discharge: • Buildings as a bottom elevation, uniform mean slope, 2884 Unstructured cells, Mannings n=0.0162 • Buildings represented as surrounded by solid walls, uniform mean slope, 2884 Unstructured cells, Mannings n=0.0162 • Buildings as a bottom elevation, 9000 Structured cells, Mannings n=0.015 • No slope (i.e. Flat bed) • Slope interpolated from original bed data
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Summary • The City flooding experiment aims at giving insight into the flow behavior in a city like environment under heavy flooding conditions • It offers a broad basis for model benchmarking that must be deliberately limited • Preliminary runs indicate that this type of scenario can be succesfully modelled mathematically with room for accuracy improvement and understanding of flow effects • Final benchmark configuration will be announced in the following weeks