ASDSO Dam Safety Toolbox

Siphons: Difference between revisions

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Many older dams were not constructed with a means of draining the reservoir. Lowering the reservoir may be needed for temporary [[construction]], for emergency response, or when regular releases aren't needed. Siphons can be a low-cost means of providing a reservoir outlet if one does not exist. The key operational parameters are: (1) the required hydraulic lift cannot exceed the effective local atmospheric pressure adjusted for vapor pressure and frictional losses; (2) the discharge point of the [[siphon]] must be lower in elevation than the body of water to be siphoned; (3) the pipe or hose used for the siphon must be designed to operate at less than atmospheric pressures; (4) siphon outlets should only be used when there are no other feasible options; and (5) siphon outlets are difficult to prime.
Many older dams were not constructed with a means of draining the reservoir. Lowering the reservoir may be needed for temporary [[construction]], for [[Emergency Response|emergency response]], or when regular releases aren't needed. Siphons can be a low-cost means of providing a reservoir outlet if one does not exist. The key operational parameters are: (1) the required hydraulic lift cannot exceed the effective local atmospheric pressure adjusted for vapor pressure and frictional losses; (2) the discharge point of the siphon must be lower in elevation than the body of water to be siphoned; (3) the pipe or hose used for the siphon must be designed to operate at less than atmospheric pressures; (4) siphon outlets should only be used when there are no other feasible options; and (5) siphon outlets are difficult to prime.


==Examples==
==Examples==

Revision as of 03:13, 2 December 2022


Many older dams were not constructed with a means of draining the reservoir. Lowering the reservoir may be needed for temporary construction, for emergency response, or when regular releases aren't needed. Siphons can be a low-cost means of providing a reservoir outlet if one does not exist. The key operational parameters are: (1) the required hydraulic lift cannot exceed the effective local atmospheric pressure adjusted for vapor pressure and frictional losses; (2) the discharge point of the siphon must be lower in elevation than the body of water to be siphoned; (3) the pipe or hose used for the siphon must be designed to operate at less than atmospheric pressures; (4) siphon outlets should only be used when there are no other feasible options; and (5) siphon outlets are difficult to prime.

Examples

Get answers to some of the common questions about siphons

Trainings

On-Demand Webinar: Design of Siphon Systems


Citations:



Revision ID: 4739
Revision Date: 12/02/2022