The quantity and quality of river water are under the influence of surface runoff,
pipe flow, return flow, and subsurface flow. The relations between rainfall and runoff
and its quality deal with several hydrological processes. However, the limited understanding
of the main runoff mechanism in a certain area, lack of the rainfall
and runoff data and the concurrent nutrient substance data are some typical reasons
that make difficulties to imitate the runoff and nutrient transport in nature. Most
physically based models cannot reflect the true complexity and heterogeneity of the
processes occurring in the fields.
The research comprehensively explores the influence of rainfall on runoff generation
and nutrient dispersion on the sloped catchment. The objective of this study is
firstly to prove that the subsurface flow plays the dominant roles of runoff formation
rather than a surface flow. Secondly, the main runoff quantity, the soil physical
characteristics are the important factors that involve in the transport of nutrient under
runoff processes. In order to achieve this aim, the study conducts the runoff
process by different rainfall intensity, land cover plots in the field study; Obtaining
the mineralization and nitrification to study the transport of nutrient in the form of
ammonium, and nitrate in several soil layers and the discharge flow in the laboratory
study; development of physical based model for specific conditions of steep-sloped
of a tropical regions.
The runoff generations in the field experiments can be observed in several plots under
artificial rainfall. The soil moisture is the indicator to represent the water content
in the soil layers. Besides that, some parameters related to the capacity of the soil
to transmit water such as hydraulic conductivity, soil porosity, texture, density are
measured. The results can be applied in the mathematical model. This stage helps
to expand the understanding of soil moisture on the water content in the soil, and
runoff generation. Under small rainfall, the surface flow and subsurface flow are
not the dominant mechanism in a steep slopes, and clay soil layers. The moisture in
land surface decides the main contribution to runoff flow in the downstream area in
short period.
In the laboratory experiments, a certain amount of fertilizer are applied in several
soil columns to study the dispersion of nitrogen is the soil layers and the runoff flow.
The soil samples from several layers and the water in the bottom of soil columns are
collected to analyze the ammonium and the nitrate. These soil quality results are
fitted by the curve of the ammonium and nitrate concentration by the Polynomial
and the Fourier series. This stage found that the ammonium is the main form of
nitrogen in the soil layers, and it increased quickly in the land surface; otherwise,
the nitrate is very small and tends to stable in three layers.
To support these empirical models based on the Polynomial and the Fourier function,
a new model using Cellular Automata is explored to emulate the overland flow
in flooded condition. The Cellular Automata model can successfully imitate the
overland flow in a slope area, with acceptable results. Besides that, the dissertation
also suggests a mathematical model to simulate the runoff flow and nutrient
transport based on the soil moisture dynamic and the water balance equations in the
various soil layers. The important keys of the method are using very thin soil layer,
and small time steps to increase the accuracy of the simulation results. Both models
have been simplified to be applicable for simulating the runoff and solute transport
in limited data conditions.
In conclusion, the results confirm the knowledge related to runoff generations. It is
expected to contribute to a profound understanding of the behavior of river water
quality and enhance development of a mathematical model for river water quality
predictions. In the future, the further research is needed to overcome these limitations
in order to study the runoff and nutrient transport deeper and correctly.