September 2008

Replicating Natural Runoff Through Retention and Dissipation

A simulation model for estimating retention volumes

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By Randel Lemoine

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Simulating the runoff discharged from a developed site with retention involves two runoff calculations. The first calculation uses the TR-55 runoff equation 2–2 (USDA 1986) to calculate the runoff entering the basin from the developed site (Qsite). The second calculation uses the alternate TR-55 runoff equation 2–1 (USDA 1986) and substitutes the site runoff volume for the precipitation volume in order to estimate the runoff discharged from the retention basin (Qout).

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The simplified version of the TR-55 runoff equation is used in the first calculation because it estimates the runoff coming directly from the surface area. The second calculation uses the alternate runoff equation because it contains two variables needed in simulating the retention and dissipation of rainwater held in the retention basin. The variable S is the “potential maximum retention after runoff begins” (USDA 1986) and represents the maximum available retention volume for the basin. The variable Ia, called the initial abstraction, “is all losses before runoff begins. It includes water retained in surface depression, water intercepted by vegetation, evaporation, and infiltration” (USDA 1986). This initial abstraction variable represents the daily dissipation volume. This depends on the time (called the recovery time) it takes to empty the basin. It is equal to the maximum retention volume divided by the recovery time. For example, if a retention basin has a volume of 3 inches and the recovery time is six days, then the daily dissipation volume is 0.5 inch. The simplified version of the TR-55 runoff equation (equation 2–3) assumes a recovery time of five days based on its empirical equation (equation 2–2) that relates the initial abstraction Ia to the maximum retention S. However, when simulating the retention basin, the recovery time and related initial abstract is not assumed to be five days. Rather, the recovery time is a variable that is estimated based on the sum of all the available means for dissipating the retained water (i.e., infiltration beds, irrigation, reuse). The retained water is calculated by subtracting both the basin’s discharge volume (Qout) and the dissipation volume from the runoff entering the basin from the developed site (Qsite). Adding the retained water from the previous day to the runoff volume for the developed site (Qsite) before calculating the basin’s discharge volume maintains the continuity between each day in the simulation.

One of the principal reasons for retaining runoff coming from developed land is to stop accelerated streambank erosion. When runoff volume coming from land in a natural condition exceeds the volume coming from a two-year rainfall, the streambanks become unstable and erosion occurs. Therefore, the model calculates the theoretical runoff volume generated from a two-year rainfall. It then counts the number of times the simulated runoff exceeds this theoretical two-year runoff volume for both the natural simulation and the developed simulation. These two counts are compared with an objective that the number of days exceeding the two-year runoff be the same for both the developed conditions and the natural conditions. Therefore, using Excel’s “Goal Seek” function, the model varies the retention volume until the number of days exceeding the two-year runoff volume equals the number of days for the natural simulation. Next Page >

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