Skip to:Content
|
Bottom
Cover image for Labyrinth and piano key weirs : PKW 2011
Title:
Labyrinth and piano key weirs : PKW 2011
Publication Information:
London : Taylor & Francis Group, 2011
Physical Description:
xv, 297 p. : ill ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9780415682824
Added Author:

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010305821 TC555 I58 2011 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Labyrinth spillways are almost as old as dam engineering. In spite of the fact that they appear as a very good technical-economical compromise, only 0.1% of large dams are equipped with such weirs. The main reason for this is that traditional labyrinth weirs usually cannot be installed on top of concrete gravity dams as they require a large foundation surface. In 2003 an improved concept of traditional labyrinth spillway emerged, with alveoli developed in overhangs from a reduced support area: the Piano Key Weir (PKW). The Piano Key Weir is a weir of particular geometry, associating to a labyrinth shape the use of overhangs to reduce the basis length. The main advantage of Piano Key Weirs is that it can be directly placed on a dam crest. As a result of extreme fl oods in the recent past, a growing demand for safety in society, and revised hydrological calculations, the need for reliable spillways has consequently become higher. In this context, the Piano Key Weir proves to be an interesting solution to increase the hydraulic capacity of spillway devices.

The book contains the state-of-the-art on this still non-conventional hydraulic structure, and is divided into six main themes:

Physical Modeling. Hydraulic capacity Physical Modeling. Downstream fittings Numerical Modeling Hydraulic Design Planned and achieved projects Nomenclature, Database, Future developments.

The papers in Labyrinth and Piano Key Weirsdemonstrate that dam engineering currently experiences a strong revival of labyrinth oriented weirs, and are particularly of interest to academia, researchers and professionals working in the area of hydraulic engineering, and to dam control authorities and dam owners.


Go to:Top of Page