Three-reservoir systems

Dr. Huidae Cho
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering...New Mexico State University

1   Learning objectives

  • Understand flow behavior in multi-reservoir pipe systems
  • Apply energy and continuity principles at a junction
  • Solve for unknown junction head and pipe discharges
  • Interpret flow directions and physical meaning of results

2   System description

  • Three reservoirs with known water surface elevations
  • Pipes connect each reservoir to a common junction
  • Flow is driven by head differences
  • Unknowns:
    • Junction head $H_J$
    • Discharges $Q_1$, $Q_2$, $Q_3$

3   Physical picture

  • Water flows from higher head to lower head
  • Junction acts as a mixing point
  • Key idea:
    • The system adjusts so that energy losses match head differences

4   Governing equations

  • Continuity at junction: \[ Q_1 + Q_2 + Q_3 = 0 \]
  • Energy equation for each pipe: \[ H_i - H_J = h_{L,i} \]
  • Head loss model (Darcy–Weisbach): \[ h_{L,i} = f_i \frac{L_i}{D_i} \frac{V_i^2}{2g} \]

5   Expressing discharge

  • Using $Q = A V$: \[ h_{L,i} = K_i Q_i^2 \]
  • Where: \[ K_i = \frac{8 f_i L_i}{g \pi^2 D_i^5} \]
  • Then: \[ Q_i = \pm \sqrt{\frac{H_i - H_J}{K_i}} \]

6   Sign convention

  • Assume flow direction initially
  • If computed $Q_i < 0$:
    • Actual flow is opposite
  • This is not an error
  • It is a solution insight

7   Solution strategy

  • Unknown: $H_J$
  • Steps:
    1. Assume $H_J$
    2. Compute $Q_i$ for each pipe
    3. Check continuity: $Q_1 + Q_2 + Q_3$
    4. Adjust $H_J$
    5. Repeat until balanced

8   Graphical interpretation

  • Plot $Q_i(H_J)$ for each pipe
  • Sum of flows should be zero
  • Intersection point gives:
    • Correct junction head
    • Consistent flow distribution

9   Physical insight

  • If $H_J$ is too high:
    • Outflows dominate
  • If $H_J$ is too low:
    • Inflows dominate
  • Correct $H_J$ balances inflow and outflow

10   Special cases

  • Equal pipe resistances:
    • Symmetric flow behavior
  • One reservoir much higher:
    • Dominant supply source
  • One pipe very large:
    • Low resistance, carries most flow

11   Common mistakes

  • Ignoring sign of $Q$
  • Using wrong head difference direction
  • Forgetting continuity at junction
  • Mixing units in $K_i$

12   Example problem (conceptual)

  • Given: \[ H_1 > H_2 > H_3 \]
  • Questions:
    1. Which reservoirs supply flow?
    2. Which receives flow?
    3. Can flow reverse in one pipe?

13   Key points

  • Three-reservoir systems are nonlinear
  • Junction head is the central unknown
  • Continuity + energy → complete solution
  • Negative discharge = reversed flow
  • Iteration is essential