4.4 Article

Experimental investigation of the hydraulic performance of porous bottom intakes

Journal

FLOW MEASUREMENT AND INSTRUMENTATION
Volume 95, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.flowmeasinst.2023.102491

Keywords

Porous media; Spatial variable flow; Porous intake; Mountain river; Discharge coefficient

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Due to technical issues with bottom intake racks, porous intakes made of rock, gravel, or sand can be a viable alternative. This study used an experimental model to assess the performance of porous bottom intakes (PBI) and examined the impacts of various parameters such as channel slope, grain size distribution of the porous media, intake structure geometry, and water depth in the channel on diverted flow rates during sediment-free flow. The study also compared the performance of one-sided and three-sided PBI models under the same conditions. The findings suggest that a slope of 1% yields higher discharge coefficient and diverted flow compared to a slope of 1.68%, and three-sided PBI models outperform one-sided models in terms of flow rate. A formula utilizing nonlinear multivariate regression, experimental data, and dimensional analysis was proposed for calculating the discharge coefficient of PBI, with a high accuracy rate of over 95%.
Due to the technical problems of bottom intake racks, porous intakes made of rock, gravel, or sand can be a suitable alternative. This research used an experimental model to investigate the performance of porous bottom intake (PBI). To this end, the effects of various parameters, including the main channel slope, grain size distribution of porous media, the geometry of the intake structure, and the water depth in the main channel, have been investigated on the diverted flow rate during sediment-free flow. The performance of one and three-sided designs has also been compared under the same conditions. A comparison of different slopes of the main channel showed that the discharge coefficient and diverted flow of the slope of 1 % are 25 % and 15 % greater than the slope of 1.68 %, respectively. The proportion of the flow that goes through the intakes compared to the overall flow of the main channel varied between 3.5 % and 8 %. Comparing the one-and three-sided PBI models shows that, on average, the flow rate inside three-sided PBI is 72 % higher than one-sided PBI. Finally, a formula has been proposed to calculate the discharge coefficient of PBI using nonlinear multivariate regression, experimental data, and dimensional analysis. The absolute error of this formula for training and testing data is less than 0.1 for more than 95 % of the data.

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