Lateral Flow

Lateral flow will be significant in areas with soils having high hydraulic conductivities in surface layers and an impermeable or semipermeable layer at a shallow depth. In such a system, rainfall will percolate vertically until it encounters the impermeable layer. The water then ponds above the impermeable layer forming a saturated zone of water, i.e. a perched water table. This saturated zone is the source of water for lateral subsurface flow.

SWAT+ incorporates a kinematic storage model for subsurface flow developed by Sloan et al. (1983) and summarized by Sloan and Moore (1984). This model simulates subsurface flow in a two-dimensional cross-section along a flow path down a steep hillslope. The kinematic approximation was used in its derivation.

Figure 2:3-3: Conceptual representation of the hillslope segment.

The kinematic wave approximation of saturated subsurface or lateral flow assumes that the lines of flow in the saturated zone are parallel to the impermeable boundary and the hydraulic gradient equals the slope of the bed.

Figure 2:3-4: Behavior of the water table as assumed in the kinematic storage model.

The drainable porosity of the soil layer is calculated:

A soil layer is considered to be saturated whenever the water content of the layer exceeds the layer’s field capacity water content. The drainable volume of water stored in the saturated layer is calculated:

Velocity of flow at the outlet is defined as

Combining equations 2:3.5.2 and 2:3.5.8 with equation 2:3.5.6 yields the equation

where all terms are previously defined.

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