Exploring water-level fluctuation amplitude in an approach channel under the regulation of a dual cascade hydro-plant in the dry season
Author(s) -
Zhiyong Wan,
Li Yun,
Jianfeng An,
Xiaogang Wang,
Long Cheng,
Yipeng Liao
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
water science and technology water supply
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1607-0798
pISSN - 1606-9749
DOI - 10.2166/ws.2022.042
Subject(s) - cascade , hydropower , amplitude , environmental science , lift (data mining) , water level , lock (firearm) , hydraulic head , yangtze river , hydrology (agriculture) , water flow , channel (broadcasting) , soil science , engineering , computer science , geotechnical engineering , physics , china , telecommunications , geography , mechanical engineering , electrical engineering , cartography , archaeology , quantum mechanics , chemical engineering , data mining
Water-level fluctuation is a crucially important hydraulic factor to meet the safety of ship navigation. Due to the uncertainty and evolution of the maximum amplitude of water-level variation in the approach channel, the river reach between two dams located along the Yangtze River in China is selected as a study area and the impact of various operating conditions of the cascade hydro-plant on the maximum amplitude of water-level variation at typical sites is revealed combining the orthogonal test method and a hydrodynamic model. In addition, the critical threshold for the water-level variation at the lower lock head of the ship lift is explored using maximum entropy method. Results demonstrate that flow variation and regulation time are the most prominent factors affecting water-level fluctuation at the lower lock head of the ship lift, and the existing standard (0.5 m within 1 h and 0.3 m within 30 min) for controlling the maximum variation in water level at the lower lock head of the ship lift is reasonable and more safety oriented. This study provides a novel perspective to understand the response of water-level fluctuation to the stochasticity of operating conditions for the cascade hydropower stations.
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