Abstract

The present research develops a systematic application of a selected family of 11 well-known design storms, all of them obtained from the same rainfall data sample. Some of them are fully consistent with the intensity–duration–frequency (IDF) curves, while others are built according to typical observed patterns in the historical rainfall series. The employed data series consists on a high-resolution rainfall time series in Valencia (Spain), covering the period from 1990 to 2012. The goal of the research is the systematic comparison of these design storms, paying special attention to some relevant quantitative properties, as the maximum rainfall intensity, the total cumulative rainfall depth or the temporal pattern characterising the synthetic storm. For comparison purposes, storm duration was set to 1 h and return period equal to 25 years in all cases. The comparison is enhanced by using each of the design storms as rainfall input to a calibrated urban hydrology rainfall–runoff model, yielding to a family of hydrographs for a given neighbourhood of the city of Valencia (Spain). The discussion and conclusions derived from the present research refer to both, the comparison between design storms and the comparison of resulting hydrographs after the application of the mentioned rainfall–runoff model. Seven of the tested design storms yielded to similar overall performance, showing negligible differences in practice. Among them, only Average Variability Method (AVM) and Two Parameter Gamma function (G2P) incorporate in their definition a temporal pattern inferred from empirical patterns identified in the historical rainfall data used herein. The remaining four design storms lead to more significant discrepancies attending both to the rainfall itself and to the resulting hydrograph. Such differences are ~8% concerning estimated discharges.

Highlights

  • Design storms, along with intensity–duration–frequency (IDF) curves, are utterly useful tools internationally and widely employed in urban drainage system (UDS) projects and studies

  • A selected family of 11 well-known design storms have been analysed and compared, attending to both the hyetographs themselves and the resulting hydrographs generated in a given real urban drainage system

  • There is a group consisting of a total of seven design storms, which essentially present very similar overall performance, attending to both the hyetographs and hydrographs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Along with intensity–duration–frequency (IDF) curves, are utterly useful tools internationally and widely employed in urban drainage system (UDS) projects and studies. They are used to evaluate the effects of intense rainfall events over a given urban basin, or, most generally, as a tool for urban drainage infrastructures design [1]. The design storm and the corresponding estimated hydrograph Q(t) share the same assigned T. Such association is not strictly rigorous, and has been widely discussed in

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call