Understanding the hydraulic gradient formula is essential in civil engineering, drainage design, groundwater flow analysis, and pipe hydraulics. Whether you’re working on SuDS, sewer networks, or open‑channel systems, the hydraulic gradient tells you how steeply water is losing energy as it flows.
This guide breaks down the formula, explains how to calculate it, and shows how it applies in real‑world engineering.
The CivilWeb Hydraulic Gradient Analysis Design Spreadsheet can save hours of repetitive calculations while ensuring compliance with the relevant standards, reliable accuracy and even optimisation tools which can save money on materials during the construction phase.
💧 What Is the Hydraulic Gradient?
The hydraulic gradient (often written as i or HGL slope) represents the change in hydraulic head per unit length of flow.
👉 It tells you how much energy water loses as it moves from one point to another.
A steeper gradient means faster flow and higher energy loss. A flatter gradient means slower flow and lower energy loss.
🧮 Hydraulic Gradient Formula
The standard hydraulic gradient formula is:
i = (h₁ - h₂) / L
Where:
| Symbol | Meaning |
| h₁ | Hydraulic head at Point 1 |
| h₂ | Hydraulic head at Point 2 |
| L | Distance between the two points |
| i | Hydraulic gradient (dimensionless) |
Hydraulic head includes:
- Elevation head
- Pressure head
- Velocity head (in some applications)
In drainage and groundwater design, velocity head is often negligible.
📌 Example Calculation
Given:
- Hydraulic head at Point A: 102.5 m
- Hydraulic head at Point B: 98.0 m
- Distance between points: 250 m
Apply the formula:
i = (102.5 - 98.0) / 250 = 4.5 / 250 = 0.018
Hydraulic gradient = 0.018 (or 1.8%)
This means the water loses 1.8 m of head for every 100 m of travel.
🌊 Why the Hydraulic Gradient Matters
✔ Pipe Flow
Used to determine friction losses and required pipe gradients.
✔ Groundwater Flow
Darcy’s Law uses hydraulic gradient to calculate seepage velocity.
✔ SuDS & Drainage
Swales, filter drains, and infiltration systems rely on gradients to ensure stable, non‑erosive flow.
✔ Open Channels
Helps determine flow depth, velocity, and stability.
🔧 Hydraulic Gradient in Darcy’s Law
The hydraulic gradient is a key part of Darcy’s Law, which governs groundwater flow:
Q = k × i × A
Where:
- Q = flow rate
- k = hydraulic conductivity
- i = hydraulic gradient
- A = cross‑sectional area
This is widely used in geotechnical engineering and infiltration design.
📐 Hydraulic Gradient vs Energy Gradient
These two terms are often confused:
| Term | Definition | Used In |
| Hydraulic Gradient Line (HGL) | Pressure head + elevation head | Water distribution, drainage |
| Energy Gradient Line (EGL) | HGL + velocity head | High‑velocity systems, pumps |
In low‑velocity drainage systems, HGL ≈ EGL.
🛠 Practical Engineering Rules of Thumb
- Gravity sewers: hydraulic gradient typically 1–5%
- Filter drains: 0.5–2%
- Swales: 1–4% (use check dams if steeper)
- Groundwater flow: gradients often <1%
📊 Worked Example: Pipe Flow
A 150 mm pipe carries water between two manholes 40 m apart.
- Upstream HGL: 55.20 m
- Downstream HGL: 54.65 m
i = (55.20 - 54.65) / 40 = 0.55 / 40 = 0.01375
Hydraulic gradient = 0.01375 (1.375%)
This value feeds into Manning’s equation or Colebrook‑White to calculate velocity and capacity.
🧭 Common Mistakes to Avoid
- ❌ Using ground level instead of hydraulic head
- ❌ Forgetting to include pressure head in pressurised systems
- ❌ Mixing units (m vs mm, m vs km)
- ❌ Assuming HGL = pipe invert (only true for full pipes)
🎯 Summary
The hydraulic gradient formula is simple but fundamental:
i = Δh / L
It underpins:
- Pipe design
- Groundwater modelling
- SuDS and drainage systems
- Open‑channel hydraulics
Mastering it gives you a clearer understanding of how water behaves in engineered and natural systems.
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