Abstract:
Inadequate natural subsurface drainage in an
agricultural area results in a rise of water table up to the root
zone of cultivated plants. This restricts the oxygen supply to
the plant root system. The high water table also reverses the
benefits of leaching of soluble salts from the root zone. An
appropriate artificial subsurface drainage system can maintain
the water table at a permissible depth, depending upon the crop
and the soil.
The prevalent theories of subsurface drainage,
employing Dupuit-Forchheimer assumptions, ignore the loss of head
due to vertical component of flow. This leads to an
underestimation of water table rise and, thus, an overestimation
of drain spacing. The effect is significant in the case of
horizontally stratified soils, pipe drains and partially
penetrating ditches due to higher vertical velocities. The
vertical flow can be accounted for by numerical solution of the
differential equation governing either two dimensional flow in a
vertical plane or three dimensional flow.
In the present study two numerical models of
two-dimensional subsurface drainage, one analysing only the
saturated domain (saturated flow model) and another analysing the
entire unsaturated-saturated domain (Total Response Model) have
been developed.
In the saturated flow model (SFM) the two dimensional
nature of the flow is accounted for by a finite differences based
solution of the differential equation governing two-dimensional
transient, unconfined saturated flow in a heterogeneous porous
medium having vertical anisotropy (subjected to drainage boundary
(v)
conditions). The SFM requires among others the time variant
distribution of recharge rate at the water table as input data
and yields the time variant water table position. In the total
response model (TRM), the two-dimensional flow is accounted for
by a finite differences based solution of the differential
equation governing two-dimensional transient
unsaturated-saturated flow in a heterogeneous porous medium
having vertical anisotropy (subjected to the drainage boundary
conditions). The TRM requires among others, the time variant
distribution of infiltration rate at ground surface as input data
and yields the spatial and temporal distribution of capillary
head (h ). This in turn yields the time variant water table
position defined by h =0.
c
In chapter III the development of saturated flow model
and total response model, along with their solution techniques
have been presented.
The saturated flow model has been implicitly validated
by comparing its response with Donnan and Kraijenhaff analytical
solutions. The model computed water table rises are found to
converge to these analytical solutions as the ideal conditions
(negligible relative resistance to vertical flow, i.e., K /K >>1)
z x
assumed in the analytical solutions are approached. However,
under non-ideal conditions the analytical solutions are found to
underestimate the water table rise. The model computed lateral
flows (with K_/K >>1) into a ditch are also found to compare
well with the Edelman solutions under different conditions, viz,
(i) sudden lowering of water level in the ditch, (ii) constant
lateral flow from aquifer to the ditch, (iii) linearly increasing
lowering of water level in the ditch, and (iv) linearly
(vi)
increasing lateral flow to the ditch.
The computed rises by the saturated flow model and the
total response model have been compared with the corresponding
field data from Haryana, India, reported by Chhedi Lai (1986).
The two models have reproduced the water table rises quite well.
As expected, the reproduction by the total response model is
better.
In chapter IV, the model validation, by comparing it
with the analytical solutions and the reported field data, has
been presented in detail.
The model solution for partially penetrating ditch
systems has been presented in the form of dimensionless design
curves. The ratio Ah/Ah , i.e., the water table rise at the
midsection computed by the model (Ah) divided by Kraijenhoff
solution (Ah ), is expressed as a function of three dimensionless
independent variables K /K , d/Yn, and d/L. The design curves
along with Kraijenhoff solution permit graphical estimation of
the steady state rise of water table (accounting for the vertical
flows) within a practical range of geometric dimensions and
parameters (i.e. 20 > K/Km> 0,1.0 > d/Y > 0.25, 0.5 > d/L
X Cm U
>0.075).
The bank storage development and its subsequent release
to a ditch has been studied by passing an assumed stage
hydrograph of 7 days duration through the drain. For the case
considered, it is found that for no infiltration on the ground
surface 60% of the bank storage is released within a short period
(20 days). The rest 40% is released slowly.
The total response model developed in the present study
is capable of simulating the generation of perched water table
(vii) •
condition (and associated throughflows to the drains) over an
impeding layer in the unsaturated zone.
The throughflow development has been studied by
considering a horizontal clay layer in the unsaturated zone of a
ditch system consisting of uniform loam soil above and below the
clay layer.
The applications of the two models, have been described
in details in chapter V. The prominent conclusions drawn from the
study have been presented in chapter VI.