A network element is characterized by a type of fluid section. It has to be
specified on the *FLUID SECTION card unless the analysis is a pure
thermomechanical calculation (no calculation of pressure, mass flow or fluid
depth). For an open channel network the boundary conditions for each branch
are located upstream (frontwater flow) or downstream (backwater flow). These
boundary conditions are made up of special elements, such as a sluice gate or
a weir. Nearly all of these elements actually consist of pairs of elements,
which reference each other. For instance, adjacent and downstream of the
sluice gate element a sluice opening element has to be defined. The upstream
element of such a pair has an additional degree of freedom attached to its
middle node to accommodate the location of any hydraulic jump which might occur
in the downstream channel branch. Therefore, all elements downstream of a pair
of such boundary elements have to reference the upstream element of the
pair. In our example, this is the sluice gate element. The friction in all
elements is modeled by the White-Colebrook law, unless the parameter MANNING
is specified on the *FLUID SECTION card. For details on these laws the reader
is referred to Section .