IDF Curves Explained

flood

Here in the Pacific Northwest it has been raining almost everyday this month. The rain gauge station closest to my house has recorded over 550 mm (22 inches) for November, which is considerably above average.

We have had several storms during this period, but very little flooding issues. My neighbour and I were talking last week after one of the storms and he commented how much it rained the previous night (the local rain gauge measured 27 mm). I agreed with him that it did seem like a good one, but later that afternoon I did a quick analysis using FlowWorks’ Intensity- Duration- Frequency Analysis tool and it turned out that the storm wasn’t “significant”.

So, what constitutes a significant rainfall event and how did I used the IDF analysis tool to quickly determine the severity of the storm?

The basics: What is an IDF Curve?

Here’s the simple answer: An IDF curve tells you how rare a given rain storm is.  Take that storm I looked up from the other night.  It is intuitive to understand the idea of how many mm or inches of rain falls.  It’s not quite as easy to say how often that storm might occur?  Every 1 year? 2 years?  Maybe it was a 1-in-10 year event? An IDF curves helps to quantify that, so you can actually say to your neighbour over the fence, yeah, it seemed like a lot of rain but really we get a storm or two like that every November.

I’ve oversimplified it, but that’s ok.  Read on for a more detailed explanation.

The Official Definition of an IDF Curve

An Intensity-Duration-Frequency curve (IDF Curve)  is a graphical representation of the probability that a given average rainfall intensity will occur (yeah, what a mouthfull!)

Rainfall Intensity (mm/hr), Rainfall Duration (how many hours it rained at that intensity) and Rainfall Frequency (how often that rain storm repeats itself) are the parameters that make up the axes of the graph of IDF curve. An IDF curve is created with long term rainfall records collected at a rainfall monitoring station. I’ll get into the details of how a to create an IDF curve and how much data you need in a future post, but needless to say, you need a lot of data. And the more data you have, the more accurate your curve will be.

How to Interpret an IDF Curve

Rainfall intensity in the IDF Curve is the average rainfall depth that falls per specific time duration. Simplified, high rainfall intensity indicates that it’s raining really hard and low intensity that it’s raining lightly. Typically the rainfall intensity is stated in mm/hr in Canada and in inches/hour in the United States.

IDF curve

Take a look at the graph above. The y-axis shown the rainfall Intensity in mm/hr, and the x-axis shows the rainfall Duration.  There’s the I and D” in the IDF.

The nearly parallel lines on the IDF Curve represent probability, or Frequency (yes, the “F” in the IDF).  So the 10-year line would represent rainfall events that have a probability of occurring once every 10 years. Another way to put it is that the probability of a 10-year magnitude storm (or greater) occurring in any given year is 1/10 or 10%, and of a 50-year storm occurring 1/50 or 2%. I should note that the information presented in the graph is based on statistical analysis of past data, rather than a prediction of actual storms.

Each plotted line in the graph represents rainfall events with the same probability of occurrence, in a range of durations (durations are shown on the x-axis). A 10-year storm can therefore be of any duration – a 10-year 30-min storm, a 10-year 2-hour storm or a 10-year 12-hour storm.

Finally, the last line on the curve is the actual rainfall event, based on the data collected from the local rain gauge.  In this case it falls below all the parallel lines.  Where (and if) the line crosses any of the parallel probability lines, would represent the actual Intensity, Duration, and Frequency of the storm.

Where Can you Find an IDF Curve?

IDF curves are available for many locations in Canada, produced by the Environment Canada’s Meteorological Service of Canada (formerly Atmospheric Environment Service). They are updated periodically, many as recently as 2005, and are available for free download from their FTP site.

A different system of illustrating rainfall statistics exists in the United States. Areas of same statistical rainfall depths are mapped for specific return periods and storm durations. There iso-hyetal maps are called TP40s (Technical Paper No. 40) and can be found for free download on the US National Weather Service. These links are great starting points for understanding rainfall behaviour in different areas of the US or Canada. Local or specialized agencies may have their own rainfall statistics that more closely emulate local conditions and experience, or particular uses for the rainfall information. Examples of these agencies include state/provincial transportation departments, municipalities, environmental protection agencies, etc.

FlowWorks and IDF Curves

FlowWorks can provide you with a quick severity analysis for a storm event.

Did the rain that fell yesterday meet or exceed the 10-year storm? Do you need to report to your City Council the possible reasons why flooding occurred during today’s big storm event? FlowWorks has a tool that can easily answer those questions. By linking your rainfall station to FlowWorks and using our Rainfall Analysis Tool you can plot the storm event as it occurs on the station’s IDF Curve in a matter of seconds. Many of you have likely gone through this exercise using a spreadsheet and found it to be cumbersome and time consuming. The analysis can be redone instantly as new data appears in the database. I have many clients who will “watch” a storm event as it rolls in from the comfort of their desk and send out their operations crews as a storm event hits a certain severity rating to areas where they know that may have issues.

The analysis can also be easily done on all the historical data in your database. The example graph below shows that rainfall that fell near the District of North Vancouver’s rain gauge August 13, 2009 exceeded the 1 in 10-year event for short duration storms (5-15 minutes) and exceeded the 2-year event for a 2-hour storm.

IDF curve

If you’re interested sign up for a free online demo where we can take you through the process of integrating your existing data and climate stations into the FlowWorks system.   Want to know more? Stay tuned for my upcoming articles on “How to Create an IDF curve”, and “What are the other uses for IDF Curves”.

Rainfall Statistics

This video shows you how to use the rainfall summary report.

Rainfall Statistics Summary Table Report

Once you have logged in and selected ‘Reporting’ in ‘My Network’, select ‘Rainfall Statistics’ to bring up the ‘Rainfall Statistics’ start up page.

Rainfall statistics tool

Basic Instructions

  1. Site Selection
  2. Date Range Selection
  3. Rainfall Summary Table Interpretation
  4. Data Export
  5. Printing

1. Site Selection

Begin by selecting the site from the drop down list. Only sites the contain rainfall data will show up in the list. For this example we will select the station Surrey Kwantlen Park.

Rainfall statistics site selection

2. Date Range Selection

Then select the year and the month of interest, from the ‘Year:’ and ‘Month:’ window. For this example we will select ‘2009’ and ‘January’. Next click ‘View Rainfall Statistics

Rainfall date range selection

If you’re having problems with the screen showing up, make sure you allow pop-ups for www.flowworks.com.

3. Rainfall Summary Table Interpretation

In the summary able that appears, the top axis shows the hours of a day and the left axis shows days of the month.
Rainfall summary table

Hourly Rainfall

Boxes that contain a point/period indicate no rainfall during that period. Boxes that contain stars/asterisks indicate that there is no data available or that the data has been invalidated.

Daily Rainfall Totals

Totals for the day are shown in the middle column and a summation of the total rainfall is located at the bottom of this column.

Rainfall summary table interpretation

The report will be viewed in metric or imperial, depending on where the station is located

Rainfall Maxima

On the right hand side the rainfall maxima are shown. These represent the maximum given rainfall in a given time period, during the day in question. For example if we look at the 6 hour column on the 6th day, we see a value of 25.8mm. This means that the greatest amount of rain that fell over any given 6-hour period is 25.8mm, and the time immediately to the right represents the time the rainfall event ended.

Rainfall maxima table

Rainfall Event Data

When you see a plus sign next to the time it refers to the time on the following day. For example on the 9th day in the 24-hour rainfall event column, the greatest amount of rainfall was 38.0mm. The rainfall event ended at 21:20 on the 10th. This allows you to look at the entire rainfall event because the system is capable of looking at rainfall over 2 calendar days and is not confused by midnight.

At the bottom of the table the monthly values for each duration are shown. For example in the 24-hour period 54.8mm was the greatest rainfall event that occurred in the given month. This way you can easily see a months worth of data to examine if any storm events match a particular minimum criteria that you have.

Rainfall event interpretation

4. Data Export

You can also copy the values from the table into Microsoft Excel by simply selecting the entire table which is done by clicking on the day cell in the top left hand corner and while holding the mouse button down, drag it to the bottom right corner. The data should now all be highlighted. Copy the data either by going to edit in the toolbar at the top of the screen and choosing copy, or by simply pushing Ctrl + C on your keyboard, while the text is highlighted.

Rainfall data export

Next bring up Microsoft Excel and click inside the spreadsheet and paste paste the data in either by using the toolbar tool ‘edit’, ‘paste’ or press Ctrl + V on your keyboard.

You will see the table as it appeared in FlowWorks. Excel will recognize the numerical values ready for analysis.

Rainfall data import into Excel

5. Printing

If you want to print directly from the internet explorer window just make sure your settings are on landscape so you’re print out comes out clearly. Or you can print off of excel.

Printing rainfall summary table

For other instruction please see the instructional video for Rainfall Summary.