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RESEARCH PRODUCT

An Evaluation of the Single-test Tension Infiltrometer Method for determining the Hydraulic Conductivity of Lateral Capillarity Domain Soils

Vincenzo BagarelloStefano FerrarisMassimo Iovino

subject

Soil ScienceSingle testInfiltration (hydrology)Hydraulic conductivityControl and Systems EngineeringLoamSoil waterEnvironmental scienceInfiltrometerGeotechnical engineeringMaximum durationAgronomy and Crop ScienceFood ScienceTensile testing

description

Abstract The transient and the steady-state single-test tension infiltrometer methods are expected to provide poor hydraulic conductivity K0 estimates in soils situated in the lateral capillarity domain. To evaluate the best strategy for conducting a single-test experiment in these soils, infiltration experiments were numerically simulated for a sandy loam and a clay soil by using two initial pressure heads (−1 and −100 m), four pressure heads at the soil surface (from −0·15 m to −0·01 m), and a maximum duration of 4 h (sandy loam soil) and 12 h (clay soil). The most accurate predictions of K0, differing by a factor of between 0·9 and 1·1 from the true value, were obtained in wet conditions, by applying the transient method to experiments of 1 h in the sandy loam soil and 6 h in the clay soil. Increasing the duration of the experiment beyond this optimal duration determined an overestimation of K0 by a maximum factor of 1·5. A substantially higher overestimation of K0 was detected with the steady-state method. Applying a transient method of analysis to a relatively long-duration experiment conducted in wet soil provided reasonably accurate estimates of K0 in soils situated in the domain of lateral capillarity.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biosystemseng.2003.11.007