Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Towards pluvial flooding hazard assessment in an urban environment

View through CrossRef
<p>Urban pluvial floods are considered as a ubiquitous hazard. The increase in intensity and frequency of extreme rainfall events, combined with high population density makes urban areas vulnerable to pluvial flooding. Pluvial floods could occur anywhere depending on the existence of minimal areas for surface runoff generation and concentration. Detailed hydrologic and hydrodynamic simulations are computationally expensive and resource-intensive. This study applies two computationally inexpensive approaches to identify risk areas for pluvial flooding. One approach uses common GIS operations to detect flood-prone depressions from a high-resolution 1m x 1m Digital Elevation Model (DEM), to identify contributing catchments, and to represent runoff concentration by a fill-spill-merge approach. The second approach employs GIS to identify pluvial flood-prone hotspots in terms of the topographic wetness index (TWI).  Based on the exceedance of a TWI threshold, flood-prone areas are identified using a maximum likelihood method. The threshold is estimated by comparing the TWI to inundation profiles from a two-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamic model (TELEMAC 2D), calculated for various rainfall depths within a given spatial window. The two approaches are applied to two flooding hotspots in Berlin, which have been repeatedly subject to pluvial flooding in the last decades and the outputs are compared against the detailed output from TELEMAC 2D. </p>
Title: Towards pluvial flooding hazard assessment in an urban environment
Description:
<p>Urban pluvial floods are considered as a ubiquitous hazard.
The increase in intensity and frequency of extreme rainfall events, combined with high population density makes urban areas vulnerable to pluvial flooding.
Pluvial floods could occur anywhere depending on the existence of minimal areas for surface runoff generation and concentration.
Detailed hydrologic and hydrodynamic simulations are computationally expensive and resource-intensive.
This study applies two computationally inexpensive approaches to identify risk areas for pluvial flooding.
One approach uses common GIS operations to detect flood-prone depressions from a high-resolution 1m x 1m Digital Elevation Model (DEM), to identify contributing catchments, and to represent runoff concentration by a fill-spill-merge approach.
The second approach employs GIS to identify pluvial flood-prone hotspots in terms of the topographic wetness index (TWI).
  Based on the exceedance of a TWI threshold, flood-prone areas are identified using a maximum likelihood method.
The threshold is estimated by comparing the TWI to inundation profiles from a two-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamic model (TELEMAC 2D), calculated for various rainfall depths within a given spatial window.
The two approaches are applied to two flooding hotspots in Berlin, which have been repeatedly subject to pluvial flooding in the last decades and the outputs are compared against the detailed output from TELEMAC 2D.
 </p>.

Related Results

Mechanism Study on Foam Flooding for Daqing Reservoirs After Polymer Flooding
Mechanism Study on Foam Flooding for Daqing Reservoirs After Polymer Flooding
Abstract Polymer flooding has been carried out widely in Daqing oilfield. The average oil recovery was 53% and the water cut was more than 90% after polymer flooding...
Effects of Emulsification on Oil Recovery and Produced Liquid Handing in Chemical Combination Flooding
Effects of Emulsification on Oil Recovery and Produced Liquid Handing in Chemical Combination Flooding
Abstract It was an argued issue concerning effects of emulsification in chemical combination flooding process. For example, it may increase oil displacement efficien...
Fast and operational building damage estimation tool for urban pluvial flooding
Fast and operational building damage estimation tool for urban pluvial flooding
Estimating flood damage is crucial for both disaster risk reduction in the prevention phase and crisis management during flood events. While models for predicting damage from river...
Building a historical flooding map through spatial analysis
Building a historical flooding map through spatial analysis
<p>Due to the increase of flooding cases around the world, there is a need for producing even more accurate flood susceptibility mapping. For this, different models, ...
Studies On Foam Flooding EOR Technique For Daqing Reservoirs After Polymer Flooding
Studies On Foam Flooding EOR Technique For Daqing Reservoirs After Polymer Flooding
Abstract Most of the high permeability reservoirs in Daqing oil field have been conducted by water flooding and polymer flooding. The average oil reco...
Multi-Hazard Entanglement
Multi-Hazard Entanglement
Globally, natural hazards such as tropical cyclones cause billions of dollars in damages. These hazards rarely occur in isolation. Frequently, one hazard triggers another, such as ...
Enhance Foam Flooding Pilot Test in Chengdong Of Shengli Oilfield: Laboratory Experiment And Field Performance
Enhance Foam Flooding Pilot Test in Chengdong Of Shengli Oilfield: Laboratory Experiment And Field Performance
Abstract As the second largest oilfield in China, Shengli oilfield has been one of the largest oil-bearing regions performing polymer flooding in the world. Howev...
PEMETAAN WILAYAH BAHAYA BANJIR DI KOTA SUNGAI PENUH
PEMETAAN WILAYAH BAHAYA BANJIR DI KOTA SUNGAI PENUH
Abstrak Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk, 1) mengetahui tingkat bahaya banjir di Kota Sungai Penuh. 2) mengetahui Persebaran dan luas area bahaya banjir di Kota Sungai Penuh. 3...

Back to Top