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Use of upscaled elevation and surface roughness data in two-dimensional surface water models

January 1, 2011

In this paper, we present an approach that uses a combination of cell-block- and cell-face-averaging of high-resolution cell elevation and roughness data to upscale hydraulic parameters and accurately simulate surface water flow in relatively low-resolution numerical models. The method developed allows channelized features that preferentially connect large-scale grid cells at cell interfaces to be represented in models where these features are significantly smaller than the selected grid size. The developed upscaling approach has been implemented in a two-dimensional finite difference model that solves a diffusive wave approximation of the depth-integrated shallow surface water equations using preconditioned Newton–Krylov methods. Computational results are presented to show the effectiveness of the mixed cell-block and cell-face averaging upscaling approach in maintaining model accuracy, reducing model run-times, and how decreased grid resolution affects errors. Application examples demonstrate that sub-grid roughness coefficient variations have a larger effect on simulated error than sub-grid elevation variations.

Publication Year 2011
Title Use of upscaled elevation and surface roughness data in two-dimensional surface water models
DOI 10.1016/j.advwatres.2011.02.004
Authors J.D. Hughes, J.D. Decker, C.D. Langevin
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Advances in Water Resources
Index ID 70005507
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Florida Water Science Center