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Culvert Design

A. Taigbenu
Culverts
 A culvert is a short underground conveyance system that allows
water to flow through an obstruction such as a highway or
railway embankment or a large superstructure

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Culvert entrance and end treatments

 Entrance and end treatments are required to stabilise the


embankment slopes around the entrance and exit of the
culvert;

 They help to blend the culvert with the embankment slope;

 They also influence the hydraulic efficiency at the entrance


(achieve lower headwater elevation at the entrance with
increased discharge through the culvert).

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Culvert entrance and end treatments (II)

Headwall (Endwall) & wingwalls


Projecting barrel

Mitered end
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Culvert hydraulics
 Flow in culverts is complex and takes place within its short length;

 Flow is a combination of gradually varied flow and rapidly varied flow;

 Using varied flow calculations for the hydraulic analysis is tedious, and
generally not followed in design;

 Two flow control assumptions that are followed in culvert design are Inlet
Control and Outlet Control assumptions.

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Inlet Control
 Culvert’s slope is hydraulically steep;

 Flow is controlled at the inlet, therefore flow in the culvert is


supercritical;
 Critical depth occurs in the vicinity of the entrance of the
culvert;

 Water surface profile in the culvert approximates the S2;

 With this condition, culvert barrel is capable of conveying a


greater discharge than the inlet will accept;

 Two situations that could occur are presented below

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Inlet control cases

Submerged Inlet Control

Unsubmerged Inlet Control

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Inlet control hydraulics
The inlet of the culvert behaves as a weir when the head water surface
elevation is less than the height of the culvert barrel, D. It is described
by the relationship;

M
HW  1.811Q 
 K 1/ 2 
D  AD 
Where
HW = head water elevation above the invert at entrance of culvert (m)
D = height of the culvert barrel (m)
A = full cross-sectional area of the culvert barrel (m2)
Q = discharge (m3/s)
K and M are constants that are presented in the Table below
The above equation applies when Q/AD1/2 < 1.93

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Constants for inlet control

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Submerged Inlet control
When the head water surface elevation is greater than the height of the culvert
barrel, D, so that its entrance is submerged, the flow into the culvert is
considered as orifice flow that is described by the relationship
2
HW  1.811Q 
 c 1/ 2 
 Y  0.5  S0
D  AD 

Where
HW = head water elevation above the invert at entrance of culvert (m)
D = height of the culvert barrel (m)
A = full cross-sectional area of the culvert barrel (m2)
Q = discharge (m3/s)
c and Y are constants that are presented in the Table above
The above equation applies when Q/AD1/2 > 2.2

Replace the slope term (-0.5S0) with (+0.7S0) if the culvert entrance is mitered.

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Outlet Control
 Outlet control occurs when the culvert slope is hydraulically mild or
when the tailwater elevation is high enough to affect the head water
elevation;

 Flow is controlled at the outlet, therefore flow in the culvert is subcritical;

 Analysis of flow in the culvert is carried out using energy loss


relationships for a pipe flowing full;

 With this condition, inlet is capable of accepting a higher discharge than


the downstream flow condition will permit;

 Two situations that could occur are presented below

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Outlet control cases

Submerged inlet and outlet

submerged inlet and unsubmerged outlet; Culvert flows full


and flows out freely.

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Outlet control case 1

 Submerged inlet and outlet


 2 gn 2 L  V 2
hl   ke  1  4 / 3 
 R  2g
HW  hl  TW  S0 L
Where ke is the entrance loss coefficient (see Table below)
n = Manning’s coefficient; R = hydraulic radius = A/P (m);
V = average velocity in the culvert (m/s);
L = length of culvert (m)
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Entrance loss coefficient for various entrances

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Outlet control case 2

 Submerged inlet and unsubmerged outlet

 2 gn 2 L  V 2
hl   ke  1  4 / 3 
 R  2g

HW  hl  D  S0 L
Where ke is the entrance loss coefficient (see Table below)
n = Manning’s coefficient; R = hydraulic radius = A/P (m);
V = average velocity in the culvert (m/s);
L = length of culvert (m), D = height of the culvert barrel (m)

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Culvert Example 1
A circular concrete culvert (L=18m long, D=600mm, n = 0.014, ke = 0.5; End conditions:
K=0.018, M=2, c=0.0292, and Y=0.74) is laid on a slope of 0.005 and expected to allow a
flow of 1.5m3/s to pass through it.
(a) For a constant tailwater of 0.2m, what is the headwater depth for both inlet and
outlet control conditions?
(b)Is the culvert flowing under inlet or outlet control conditions?
(c) What would be the result if the tailwater depth were 0.8m?

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HW  1.811Q 
Submerged Inlet control:  c 1/ 2 
 Y  0.5  S0  HW  3.14m
D  AD 
Q
 6.85
AD1 / 2
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Culvert Example 1 (II)

Outlet control:  2 gn 2 L  V 2
hl   ke  1  4 / 3 
 R  2g

ke = 0.5, R=D/4=0.15m, n=0.014, L=18m, V=4Q/πD2=5.31m/s,


V2/(2g)=1.434m
hl = 3.40m HW  hl  D  S0 L  3.40  0.6  0.09  3.91m

HW from outlet control is higher than that from inlet control, so outlet control
prevails, and HW=3.91m
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Culvert Example 1 (III)

With the new outlet condition that is submerged, inlet submerged control
produces HW=3.14m as before.

Outlet control gives:


HW  hl  TW  S0 L  3.40  0.8  0.09  4.11m
The head loss, hl from outlet control is as before, hl = 3.40m

Outlet control still prevails, and HW=4.11m

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Culvert Example 2
A circular culvert (L=11m long, n = 0.013, ke = 0.5; End conditions: K=0.0098,
M=2, c=0.0389, and Y=0.67) is laid on a slope of 0.03 and expected to allow a
flow of 1.4m3/s to pass through it with a maximum allowable headwater
elevation, HW=1.8m. Determine the size of the culvert barrel to convey this flow
with TW=0.15m.
Examine unsubmerged Inlet control:
M 2
HW  1.811Q  1.8  1.8111.4  4  4
 K 1/ 2 
  0.0098 2.5   D  0.00567 D  0.49m
D  AD  D  D 
Unsubmerged inlet condition cannot be valid because HW > D; and this is
Q
further supported by the fact that AD1 / 2
 10.6  1.93

Examine Submerged Inlet control:


2 2
HW  1.811Q  1.8  1.8111.4  4 
 c 1/ 2   Y  0.5  S 0   0.0398 2.5   0.67  0.015
D  AD  D  D 

1.8 0.415
  0.67  0.015
D D5
Q
The value of D that satisfies the above equation is 0.75m, and  3.7  2.2
AD1 / 2
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Culvert Example 2 (II)

Examine Outlet control:  2 gn 2 L  V 2


hl   ke  1  4 / 3 
 R  2g
ke = 0.5, R=D/4, n=0.013, L=11m, Q=1.4m3/s V=4×1.4/πD2=1.783/D2,
V2/(2g)=0.162/D4

HW+S0L = hl+D → 1.8+0.03×11 = D + (1.5+0.232/D4/3)0.162/D4

2.13 = D + (1.5+0.232/D4/3)×0.162/D4

The value of D that satisfies the above equation is 0.68m


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Culvert Example 2 (III)

Comparing the value of D=0.75m obtained from inlet control and the
value of D=0.68m from Outlet control, design considerations require that
the more conservative value of D=0.75m be used as the size of the barrel
of the culvert.

Recommended culvert barrel diameter = 0.75m.

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