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Published online 16 August 2005
Published in Vadose Zone J 4:866-880 (2005)
DOI: 10.2136/vzj2004.0111
© 2005 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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ORIGINAL RESEARCH

Mini Suction Cups and Water-Extraction Effects on Preferential Solute Transport

J. Maximilian Köhne*

Dep. of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, Texas A&M Univ., Scoates Hall, College Station, TX 77843-2117
Currently at: Univ. of Rostock, Institute for Land Use, Justus-von-Liebig Weg 6, D-18059 Rostock, Germany

* Corresponding author (max.koehne{at}uni-rostock.de)

Received 23 July 2004.

Soil water suction cups used in laboratory solute transport studies may cause undesired perturbations of the flow field. The twofold objective of this study was to test mini suction cups, and to assess the effects of pore water-extraction rate and cup size on preferential water flow and bromide (Br) breakthrough. Porous ceramic cups of 0.25-cm outer diameter and 1-cm length could extract 1 cm3 of pore water within 17 (34, 38) min from 100% (85%, 70%) saturated loam soil by applying 0.1 (0.3, 0.5) bar suction. The corresponding sampling times for larger cups (0.6-cm diam., 2-cm length) were 3.3, 4.6, and 5.7 min. The smaller cups were subsequently tested for solution extraction of 1-cm3 samples every 20 min out of the matrix and preferential flow path (PFP) of a large soil column (24-cm diam., 80-cm high) during a Br transport experiment. Numerical simulations were used (i) to describe the Br transport experiment and (ii) to evaluate how preferential Br transport would be affected by pore solution extraction at different locations in the matrix and the PFP of a loam soil block (20 by 20 by 20 cm3) subject to wet and dry initial conditions. Three-dimensional water flow and solute transport were simulated using the Richards and convection–dispersion equations. The experimental and simulation results revealed a dilemma: while fast solution extraction using larger cups altered the flow field and preferential Br breakthrough for wet and particularly for dry initial conditions, slower solution extraction using small cups caused negligible perturbation of the flow field, but yielded insufficient resolution of the preferential Br breakthrough. Sampling in the matrix did not considerably affect Br transport, and gave sufficient resolution of the matrix Br peak. This study showed that the use of suction cups for measuring solute transport may be problematic in case of preferential flow.

Abbreviations: CV, doefficient of variation • IC, ion chromatography • HPLC, high-pressure liquid chromatography • PFP, preferential flow path • TDR, time domain reflectometry




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L. Weihermuller, R. Kasteel, and H. Vereecken
Soil Heterogeneity Effects on Solute Breakthrough Sampled with Suction Cups: Numerical Simulations
Vadose Zone J., July 26, 2006; 5(3): 886 - 893.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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