PORDEUS, R. V.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4690910312410983; PORDEUS, Roberto Veira.
Resumo:
The surface irrigation systems are the most used not just in Brazil but, in the whole
world mainly due to the economy of energy and its operation easiness; however, these
systems present low levels of performance, usually, as a consequence of inadequate
design and management. Thus, the objective of this research was to develop a tool
capable to make possible the optimization of the continuous flow furrow irrigation
performance, making successive simulations of the advance phase and respective
prognostics of the performance parameters of the irrigation system. The simulations of
the advance phase were accomplished by the kinematic-wave model implemented in
this research basing in the theoretical development presented by Walker & Humpherys
(1983). The methodology of Burt et al. (1997) was used to evaluate the furrow irrigation
performance parameters. The proposed model was written in the programming language
DELPHI 5.0 and denominated SASIS, "Software Applied to Simulation of the Surface
Irrigation", and had its validation tested for different field conditions. The results
demonstrated that the applied discharge had decisive influence on the performance
parameters of the furrow irrigation system, in which the best performance happened for
discharges close to allowable minimum values. It was verified that the field parameter
that make more difficulty the optimization is the infiltration, while the length and the
slope don't interfere in a decisive way, allowing the optimization be reached for a great
strip of values of those parameters. It still was verified that in soils with high infiltration
rates, the greatest difficulty in the optimization is to minimize the deep percolation
losses, while in soils with low infiltration rates the deep percolation losses as well as the
runoff losses could be easily minimized. The results of this research show the need of
the optimization in the furrow irrigation systems with continuous flow, identifying
although that for some field conditions high levels of performance can be reached by
optimization. The model developed in this research presents effective mechanisms in
the accomplishment of countless simulations, in a discharge strip understood between
the minimum and the maximum allowable values, aiming to determine the relationship
between discharge and water application efficiency, deep percolation and runoff rates,
and consequently to optimize the performance of the furrow irrigation systems with
continuous flow.