Abstract
A baffle-drop structure is a flow conveyance structure that can be used for transport of urban storm water down to underground storage tunnels. The water cascades down the structure from baffle to baffle and plunges into a pool at the bottom from where it is conveyed to the tunnel through an adit. The structure has been used successfully in a limited number of urban drainage schemes. However, its hydraulics and air entrainment characteristics are not fully understood. Using a series of laboratory experiments, an analysis has been tested and validated that may be used for design. The analysis provides a dimensionless relationship between key variables, including design discharge, shaft diameter, baffle spacing, and position of a vertical wall dividing the shaft in a dry and a wet portion. Using this relationship the shaft can be designed to maintain atmospheric pressure throughout its height with little or no air being entrained into the tunnel.
Published Version
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