Urban sewer flooding:analysis of the behavior of drainage systems during extreme rain events
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Tomei, Giovanni
Piro, Patrizia
Copertino, Vito
Maksimovic, Cedo
Macchione, Francesco
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Doctoral program in Environmental and land engineering, XXIV Ciclo, a.a. 2011; Currently cities and communities are experiencing ever growing problems related to
urban pluvial flooding. This is due primarily to inefficient drainage inlets and
overloaded sewer systems. In fact, existing drainage systems rapidly reach their
maximum capacity and tend to work pressurized even in the case of medium-entity
storms.
Damage and losses caused by flood events in urban areas, primarily life and
economic losses and traffic disruption, can be significant. Moreover, this situation is
destined to worsen in the immediate future due to the fervent urbanization process
and the ongoing climate changes.
This research is therefore aimed at investigating this type of event, because to
guarantee an efficient working of the drainage systems is a prerequisite in modern
societies. Specifically the broader objective of the study is to contribute to an
improvement of urban flood management by enhancing urban drainage modeling and
storm motion forecasting. In order to achieve such scope the following detailed tasks
were performed:
1. Investigation of the various LiDAR Digital Terrain Models (DTMs) available
for the drainage modeling of a study area.
From literature review it is evident that a great effort has been made to improve
existing hydraulic models and to develop new ones. Nevertheless, little interest
has been devoted to evaluate the effects of the use of different available LiDAR
DTMs on hydraulic modeling. The research is therefore motivated by the need to
know how LiDAR DTMs with different detail scale (LiDAR DSM first, LiDAR
DSM last and LiDAR DTM bare earth with overlapped building) can affect the
hydraulic modeling of drainage networks. Every DTM is in fact characterized by
a variable presence of non-ground surface features, such as cars, buildings or
vegetation, that will influence surely the hydraulic response of the urban
catchment differently. Consequently every data set was studied by GIS-based
analysis methods, such as calculation of surface depressions, in order to evaluate
whether the consideration of all the non-ground features is necessary for hydraulic modeling purposes, or whether the use of a less detailed LiDAR DTM,
adequately improved, could be an approachable solution.
2. Analysis of improvements brought by a dual drainage approach in simulating the
behavior of a drainage network during extreme rain events, compared to the use
of a conventional methodology.
Another question that justifies the work carried out by the author and presented
in the thesis is related to the need of improving available urban drainage
modeling. Most of these models are in fact based on process simplifications that
are far removed from reality, such as assuming that when water leaves the sewer
it is stored in a virtual reservoir and does not follow the natural flow paths, i.e.
the effect of local topography is neglected. This approach provides a very biased
image of flooding process. Consequently the research was aimed at quantifying
capabilities and limits of two urban drainage modeling with diverse
sophistication level. The first one was based on the classical hypothesis
according to which the drainage system is composed only of the sewer system,
that is to consider that stormwater, once entered the sewer system, can no longer leave this system coming back to the surface. Instead the second one was based
on the dual drainage approach, i.e. it was assumed that the urban drainage
system was composed of a surface network and the sewer network. The
evaluation of the best approach was performed by comparing the water volume
distributions in the sewer network and the number of surcharged sewer trunks
resulting from hydraulic simulations. Specifically the issues relative to the
development of the most complicated model, that is the dual drainage one, were
studied in more detail: the influence of buildings and DTM resolution on the
surface network definition, and the introduction of criteria to be taken into
account for pond filtering parameters were the topics deepened through the use
of an innovative methodology, the AOFD tool (Automatic Overland Flow
Delineation).3. Study of the potentials of a dense network of rain gauges in forecasting storm
movements for flood prevention purposes.
This research was performed because, currently, methods for rainfall prediction
are mainly based on radar measurements. However rain gauge data are often available whereas radar data are not. Furthermore radar instruments enable the
investigation of convective cells motion, whereas rain gauges data allow the
analysis of the movement of rainfall patterns recorded on the ground, that is
more important for hydraulic modeling. Consequently storm movement
parameters, velocity and direction, were derived by analyzing rainfall data
trough available storm tracking procedures. The method proposed by Diskin was
tested and, in particular, the extent to which the choice of the reference feature in
the hyetograph and the location of the recording stations inside the catchment
can affect the results of the methodology was studied in detail. The quality of the
elaborations was estimated by comparing the results obtained with other
physical phenomena which are related to storm movement, such as wind
movement data. In particular statistical analysis, based on the computation of the
correlation coefficient and root mean square deviation between storm and wind
data sets, were performed. With the results from the research presented herein, it is expected that:
1. DTM enhancement methods generate hydraulically corrected DTMs that can
potentially lead to improvements in urban pluvial flood modeling.
2. more realistic simulations of the drainage system are performed by developing
dual drainage models. In this way engineers could aim at minimizing both the
costs of construction of new works and maintenance of existing structures by
evaluating systematically the effectiveness of all the possible design solutions.
Actually, the use of such a modeling will have to push them to optimize the
working conditions of both the surface and sewer networks when evaluating
flood control and mitigation measures.
3. rain gauges are considered as valid alternatives in rainfall movement prediction,
to be taken into account in areas where radar measurements cannot be obtained
yet. In fact the results of the elaborations will demonstrate how such
instruments, that are more approachable than radar ones for economical and
practical reasons, are very useful in forecasting the movements that future storm
events can make in a monitored area. Similar information could be also used in
connection with hydraulic models, previously calibrated for the same study area,in order to evaluate in advance the possible flood-prone areas. In addition the
analysis of the results, obtained by considering an ever decreasing number of
recording stations, will give interesting information to municipalities having
limited budget for equipping themselves with an adequate number of such
instruments.; Università della CalabriaSoggetto
Costruzioni idrauliche; Inondazioni; Drenaggio
Relazione
ICAR/02;