Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 21 segundos...
Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 12 Par: 6 (2020)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Can Lumped Characteristics of a Contributing Area Provide Risk Definition of Sediment Flux?

Barbora Jáchymová    
Josef Krása    
Tomá? Dostál and Miroslav Bauer    

Resumen

Accelerated soil erosion by water has many offsite impacts on the municipal infrastructure. This paper discusses how to easily detect potential risk points around municipalities by simple spatial analysis using GIS. In the Czech Republic, the WaTEM/SEDEM model is verified and used in large scale studies to assess sediment transports. Instead of computing actual sediment transports in river systems, WaTEM/SEDEM has been innovatively used in high spatial detail to define indices of sediment flux from small contributing areas. Such an approach has allowed for the modeling of sediment fluxes in contributing areas with above 127,484 risk points, covering the entire Czech Republic territory. Risk points are defined as outlets of contributing areas larger than 1 ha, wherein the surface runoff goes into residential areas or vulnerable bodies of water. Sediment flux indices were calibrated by conducting terrain surveys in 4 large watersheds and splitting the risk points into 5 groups defined by the intensity of sediment transport threat. The best sediment flux index resulted from the correlation between the modeled total sediment input in a 100 m buffer zone of the risk point and the field survey data (R2 from 0.57 to 0.91 for the calibration watersheds). Correlation analysis and principal component analysis (PCA) of the modeled indices and their relation to 11 lumped characteristics of the contributing areas were computed (average K-factor; average R-factor; average slope; area of arable land; area of forest; area of grassland; total watershed area; average planar curvature; average profile curvature; specific width; stream power index). The comparison showed that for risk definition the most important is a combination of morphometric characteristics (specific width and stream power index), followed by watershed area, proportion of grassland, soil erodibility, and rain erosivity (described by PC2).

 Artículos similares

       
 
Dapeng Zhang, Bowen Zhao, Haoyu Jiang and Keqiang Zhu    
The conventional mooring positioning technique is cost-effective; however, it shows poor maneuverability and positioning precision. In this study, to calculate the mooring tension, mooring cables were discretized into lumped mass models using the lumped ... ver más

 
Lili Liang, Yufeng Hu, Zhiwu Liu, Yuntao Ye, Kuang Li, Kexin Liu, Haiqing Xu and Xiquan Liu    
The lumped hydrological model and empirical model have the problems of low accuracy and short forecasting period in real-time flood forecasting of small- and medium-sized rivers in a mountainous watershed. The sharing of underlying surface data such as h... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Hosein Gholami-Khesht, Pooya Davari, Chao Wu and Frede Blaabjerg    
This paper proposes a systematic control design method for active damping control of grid-connected voltage source converters (VSCs). The proposed control method considers the conventional cascaded control loops and improves them by including additional ... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Stephen D. Heister, John Smallwood, Alexis Harroun, Kevin Dille, Ariana Martinez and Nathan Ballintyn    
Rotating (also termed continuous spin) detonation technology is gaining interest in the global research and development community due to the potential for increased performance. Potential performance benefits, thrust chamber design, and thrust chamber co... ver más
Revista: Aerospace

 
Wensen Zhang, Zilong Ping, Yongling Fu, Shicheng Zheng and Peng Zhang    
A dynamic load simulator, which can reproduce on-ground aerodynamic hinge moment of control surface, is an essential rig for the performance and stability test of an aircraft actuation system. In this paper, an observer-based backstepping adaptive contro... ver más
Revista: Aerospace