Performance of a shallow-water model for simulating flow over trapezoidal broad-crested weirs
Published Online: Nov 15, 2019
Page range: 322 - 328
Received: Jan 08, 2019
Accepted: Mar 19, 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/johh-2019-0014
Keywords
© 2019 Jaromír Říha et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
Shallow-water models are standard for simulating flow in river systems during floods, including in the near-field of sudden changes in the topography, where vertical flow contraction occurs such as in case of channel overbanking, side spillways or levee overtopping. In the case of stagnant inundation and for frontal flow, the flow configurations are close to the flow over a broad-crested weir with the trapezoidal profile in the flow direction (i.e. inclined upstream and downstream slopes). In this study, results of shallow-water numerical modelling were compared with seven sets of previous experimental observations of flow over a frontal broad-crested weir, to assess the effect of vertical contraction and surface roughness on the accuracy of the computational results. Three different upstream slopes of the broad-crested weir (V:H = 1: