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SIMULTANEOUS HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER IN SOIL COLUMNS EXPOSED TO FREEZING/THAWING CONDITIONS1

 

作者: I. Nassar,   Robert Horton,   G. Flerchinger,  

 

期刊: Soil Science  (OVID Available online 2000)
卷期: Volume 165, issue 3  

页码: 208-216

 

ISSN:0038-075X

 

年代: 2000

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: Frozen soil;soil temperature;coupled heat and water flow in soil;solute redistribution in freezing soil;SHAW model

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Soil heat and mass transfer are important processes in nature The effects of soil solution concentration on soil heat and mass transfer have not been investigated thoroughly for freezing/thawing conditions. The objective of this study was to evaluate the SHAW model predictions of heat, water, and chemical transfer in saline and solute-free soils. Heat and mass transfer was studied in closed soil columns. Included were loam soil materials with two salinity levels. Three derivatives of benzoic acid were used as tracers for liquid water movement. Soil was packed into PVC columns that were buried vertically in a field soil profile and exposed to ambient weather conditions. After 72 days, the soil columns were removed from the field and sectioned into 0.02-m increments in order to measure water content, chloride, and benzoic acid tracer distributions. In addition to the observed heat and mass transfer, the SHAW model was used to predict heat and mass transfer in the soil columns. The model described the temperature distributions accurately for both salinized and solute-free soils. Both observed and predicted values of water distribution showed water accumulation in the upper 0.4 m in the solute-free soil. The water diminished slightly in the upper 0.20-m region in the salinized soil columns. Within the salinized soil columns, the final solute distribution did not indicate appreciable net solute movement. The observed and predicted frost depths in the solute-free soil were between 0.45 m and 0.65 m. Freezing was not significant in the salinized soil. The SHAW model should be improved if it is expanded to include the effects of temperature and osmotic potentials on liquid water flow in soil.

 



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