TY - JOUR
T1 - An excess-work approach to assessing channel instability potential within urban streams of Chicago, Illinois
T2 - Relative importance of spatial variability in hydraulic conditions and stormwater mitigation
AU - Meem, Tasneem Haq
AU - Rhoads, Bruce L.
AU - Fouts, Leo
AU - Schmidt, Arthur
AU - Byard, Gregory
N1 - The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Chicago Metropolitan Water Reclamation District.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Stormwater management in urban environments typically involves regulation of release rates of stored water from control structures to mitigate enhanced peak flows that can cause damaging flooding. The extent to which this mitigation influences stream geomorphic stability remains largely unexplored. Moreover, few, if any, studies have examined how instability is related to hydraulic effects of in-channel structures within urban stream systems. This paper assesses the potential for channel instability under existing conditions in two urban streams in Cook County, Illinois using a stream-power modeling approach. It also evaluates the impact of watershed-specific release rates intended to mitigate flooding from future development on instability potential. The analysis utilizes hydrologic and hydraulic modeling to estimate stream power per unit area for 2-year and 50-year storm events for both the existing base condition and for four release-rate scenarios. Stream power exceeding the critical power required to mobilize channel bed material is integrated over time to determine excess work. Results show that the spatial distribution of excess work for the base condition varies by more than nine orders of magnitude within individual reaches, confirming high potential for instability. Release-rate scenarios both increase and decrease the magnitude of excess work relative to the base conditions within specific reaches of the two streams but do not alter substantially the high variability in excess work. The results demonstrate that instability potential in these urban fluvial systems is governed primarily by spatial variability in hydraulic properties associated with fragmentation of the streams by multiple in-channel structures.
AB - Stormwater management in urban environments typically involves regulation of release rates of stored water from control structures to mitigate enhanced peak flows that can cause damaging flooding. The extent to which this mitigation influences stream geomorphic stability remains largely unexplored. Moreover, few, if any, studies have examined how instability is related to hydraulic effects of in-channel structures within urban stream systems. This paper assesses the potential for channel instability under existing conditions in two urban streams in Cook County, Illinois using a stream-power modeling approach. It also evaluates the impact of watershed-specific release rates intended to mitigate flooding from future development on instability potential. The analysis utilizes hydrologic and hydraulic modeling to estimate stream power per unit area for 2-year and 50-year storm events for both the existing base condition and for four release-rate scenarios. Stream power exceeding the critical power required to mobilize channel bed material is integrated over time to determine excess work. Results show that the spatial distribution of excess work for the base condition varies by more than nine orders of magnitude within individual reaches, confirming high potential for instability. Release-rate scenarios both increase and decrease the magnitude of excess work relative to the base conditions within specific reaches of the two streams but do not alter substantially the high variability in excess work. The results demonstrate that instability potential in these urban fluvial systems is governed primarily by spatial variability in hydraulic properties associated with fragmentation of the streams by multiple in-channel structures.
KW - channel instability potential
KW - fluvial geomorphology
KW - in-channel structures
KW - Stormwater management
KW - stream power
KW - watershed-specific release rates
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U2 - 10.1177/03091333241276205
DO - 10.1177/03091333241276205
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85203260941
SN - 0309-1333
VL - 48
SP - 754
EP - 780
JO - Progress in Physical Geography
JF - Progress in Physical Geography
IS - 5-6
ER -