Measurement of variation in soil solute tracer concentration across a range of effective pore sizes
- 1 June 1993
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Water Resources Research
- Vol. 29 (6) , 1831-1837
- https://doi.org/10.1029/93wr00529
Abstract
Solute transport concepts in soil are based on speculation that solutes are distributed nonuniformly within large and small pores. Solute concentrations have not previously been measured across a range of pore sizes and examined in relation to soil hydrological properties. For this study, modified pressure cells were used to measure variation in concentration of a solute tracer across a range of pore sizes. Intact cores were removed from the site of a field tracer experiment, and soil water was eluted from 10 or more discrete classes of pore size. Simultaneous changes in water content and unsaturated hydraulic conductivity were determined on cores using standard pressure cell techniques. Bromide tracer concentration varied by as much as 100% across the range of pore sizes sampled. Immediately following application of the bromide tracer on field plots, bromide was most concentrated in the largest pores; concentrations were lower in pores of progressively smaller sizes. After 27 days, bromide was most dilute in the largest pores and concentrations were higher in the smaller pores. A sharp, threefold decrease in specific water capacity during elution indicated separation of two major pore size classes at a pressure of 47 cm H2O and a corresponding effective pore diameter of 70 μm. Variation in tracer concentration, on the other hand, was spread across the entire range of pore sizes investigated in this study. A two‐porosity characterization of the transport domain, based on water retention criteria, only broadly characterized the pattern of variation in tracer concentration across pore size classes during transport through a macroporous soil.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- The influence of tidal marshes on upland groundwater discharge to estuariesBiogeochemistry, 1990
- Unsaturated solute transport through a forest soil during rain storm eventsGeoderma, 1990
- An aggregated mixing zone model of solute transport through porous mediaJournal of Contaminant Hydrology, 1988
- COMPARISON BETWEEN SUCTION AND FREE-DRAINAGE SOIL SOLUTION SAMPLERS1Soil Science, 1986
- Profiles of Bromide and Increased Soil Moisture after Infiltration into Soils with MacroporesSoil Science Society of America Journal, 1984
- Macropores and water flow in soilsWater Resources Research, 1982
- Soil Solution Nutrient Concentrations Sampled with Tension and Zero‐Tension Lysimeters: Report of DiscrepanciesSoil Science Society of America Journal, 1982
- Soil morphology and preferential flow along macroporesAgricultural Water Management, 1981
- Spatial variability of the leaching characteristics of a field soilWater Resources Research, 1976
- Comments on ‘A technique using porous cups for water sampling at any depth in the unsaturated zone’ by Warren W. WoodWater Resources Research, 1974