MEASUREMENT OF SOLUTE TRANSPORT DURING CONSTANT INFILTRATION FROM A POINT-SOURCE

Citation
Rg. Kachanoski et al., MEASUREMENT OF SOLUTE TRANSPORT DURING CONSTANT INFILTRATION FROM A POINT-SOURCE, Soil Science Society of America journal, 58(2), 1994, pp. 304-309
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science
ISSN journal
03615995
Volume
58
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
304 - 309
Database
ISI
SICI code
0361-5995(1994)58:2<304:MOSTDC>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Theory describing transport from a point source is well developed, but not tested because of the lack of experimental data. There are few fi eld studies because sampling requires either destructive soil coring o r vacuum solution samplers. The objective of this study was to develop a method of measuring quickly and nondestructively the vertical flux of solute below a drip (point) source of water. The method uses vertic ally installed time domain reflectometry (TDR) probes making it approp riate for field studies. Water is dripped between the vertical probes at a constant rate until the wetting front has passed the ends of the probes and the measured soil water content is not changing. At this ti me, the water source is switched to one with a constant concentration of electrolyte tracer, dripping at the same rate. The relative change in TDR impedance is related to the advance of the solute front. Thus, measurements of average solute velocity and cumulative travel time as a function of depth are obtained. At a low drip rate into a sandy soil , the measured advance of the solute front vs. the cubed root of time was similar to that predicted from the theory of gravity-free infiltra tion. Identical measurements were obtained for the advance of solute-f ree water into a soil with a high background concentration of solute. Methods of estimating solute dispersivity and the relative influence o f gravity vs. capillarity from the measurements were suggested but not tested. In particular a method of estimating alpha, the ratio of hydr aulic conductivity and matric flux potential, is suggested using exist ing solutions of the linearized equation for flux from a point source.