dc.description.abstract |
Surface irrigation projects which account for almost all of the
irrigated land areas of the world has been studied extensively by many
investigators and their performance was found to be lower than expected.
Many of these projects are constructed and operated without adequate
technical input, with consequent low uniformity and efficiency of water
application. However, irrigators are still faced with significant challenges in
making both design and operation of surface irrigation systems more
.efficient
Data used in this study was collected from irrigations conducted at
Kenana Sugar State site as reported in (Abd el Wahab, 2000) during the
.1997-98 and 1998-99 irrigation seasons
In this study a mathematical design approach for furrow irrigation
was developed as spreadsheet model to simulate all hydraulic phases of
water movement as an aid to design and to evaluate the performance of
furrow irrigation. The irrigation model simulates the hydraulics of furrow
irrigation at the field scale. The principal role of the model is the evaluation
of alternative field layouts (field length and slope) and management
.(practices (water application rates and cut-off times
Input data requirements for the simulation component include field
length, slope, infiltration characteristics (or advance data), target application
depth, water application rate, Manning’s resistance and furrow geometry. A
series of simple relations were presented for estimating the advance and
recession phase, and performance of surface irrigation systems. The
approach uses continuity equation to compute the advance time to field end
and to half the distance to field end. The irrigation methods differ slightly in
how the surface storage volume is computed. Initially a surface shape factor
7
is used to compute storage volume during advance phase; however,
estimation of this storage volume was corrected during storage, depletion
and recession phases by utilizing Muskingum-Cunge routing method. The
subsurface volume calculations use a modified Kostiakov equation that
includes both an initial sink term and a constant final infiltration rate.
Recession calculations differ for each method. With sloping methods,
adjustments to a straight line recession curve make recession estimates
more reasonable. It is shown that the procedure can generate reasonable
predictions of design performance over a range of conditions. Model
verification was made by its comparison with FAO-surface-model, and
zero-inertia model. Model application was is provided to put the method
and its application into context by evaluating application efficiency for the
.cases of short, medium and long furrows of Kenana Sugar Scheme
Output includes a detailed advance-recession trajectory, distribution
of infiltrated water, volume balance, run-off hydrograph, depth of water
flow at the end of the field. In addition, a set of irrigation performance
indicators (distribution uniformity, application efficiency, tail water ratio,
and deep percolation ratio and deficit coefficient) is calculated, assuming
that the infiltrated water follows a normal frequency distribution. In Kenana
Scheme State the storage efficiency was found to be unsatisfactory, hence,
.it suggested through model simulation to adjust the cut off time
The approach is also conducive to sensitivity analysis for
determining the impact of variations in input parameters on performance.
Hence, model sensitivity to explore optimum operating polices for Kenana
Sugar Scheme was made by running different scenarios of expected water
application depths, inflow rates and furrow lengths. Study conclusions and
recommendations for policy making and future research are summarized in
.an ending chapter of the study |
en_US |