CIVE 633 - ENVIRONMENTAL HYDROLOGY

HYDROGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS

3.3  PHYSICAL FACTORS CONTROLLING WASTEWATER DISTRIBUTION

  • The factors that control the response of a lake to a waste input are:

    • Size

    • Shape

    • Depth

    • Residence time (or its reciprocal, flushing rate)

    • Temperature regime (leading to stratification)

    • Hydrometeorological conditions (climate)

    • Hydrological regime.

  • A deeper lake has a long residence time (low flushing rate); this is the single most important factor in lake response.

  • A period of sudden precipitation in spring may cause a substantial nutrient load.
3.4  DENSITY EFFECTS AND DENSITY CURRENTS

  • Vertical density differences are a common feature of lakes and estuaries, and sometimes of rivers.

  • Density gradients are caused by differences in water temperature and in dissolved solids (TDS) or suspended solids (TSS).

  • In freshwater lakes, temperature is the cause of density stratification.

  • In estuaries, salinity is the primary cause of density stratification.

  • In rivers, suspended material may influence stratification.

  • Stratification in a lake may be weak or strong.

  • The Richardson number describes the stability of a stratified condition in a lake:

    Ri = - (g/ρ) (dρ/dz) / (du/dz)2

    ρ= density

    z= vertical distance

    u= current velocity

    g= gravitational acceleration

  • When Ri = 0, the stratification is neutral.

  • When Ri > 0, the stratification is stable.

  • When Ri < 0, the stratification is unstable.

  • The incoming water volume to a lake may flow over, under, or through the main water mass as a result of gravity and density, leading to density currents.

  • If the density gradient causing the density current is due to suspended material, the phenomenon is called a turbidity current.

  • Turbidity currents are common in estuaries and large reservoirs.
3.6  THERMAL PROPERTIES OF LAKES

  • Factors determining lake temperature are latitude, altitude, and continental location.

  • Within the midlatitudes, lake temperature is strongly variable during most of the year.

  • The sun is the principal source of energy.

  • The visible-range wavelengths are almost totally absorbed within the upper 2 m.

  • Wind is the distributing force for the heated water within the basin.

  • Water's high specific heat is another important thermal property in lakes.

  • This results in large storage of thermal energy and slower rate of heating and cooling than the surrounding land surface.

3.8  THERMAL CYCLE IN A TYPICAL MIDLATITUDE LAKE

  • Most lakes are located within midlatitudes and undergo seasonal temperature fluctuations during the year.

  • Seasonal variations of temperature lead to three well defined layers developed during the summer:

    • The upper homogeneous warm layer, or epilimnion.

    • The lower fairly homogeneous cold layer, or hypolimnion.

    • The intermediate layer characterized by a sharp temperature gradient, or thermocline.

  • Epilimnetic water gradually heats until the latter part of July.

  • The thermocline depth increases throughout the summer until it finally breaks up completely in the fall.

  • The initiation of fall circulation (complete mixing) is a direct function of the frequency and force of winds and the seasonal decrease in temperature.

  • As temperature decreases further during total circulation reaching 4oC, and during a calm, cold night, typically in December, an ice cover will usually occur.

  • The ice cover will continue to increase during winter.

  • Temperature in the hypolimnion gradually increases through the summer.

  • Turbulent transfer of heat and upwelling may be responsible for this process.

 
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