Falling head (FH) infiltration procedures can give rapid estimates of the field saturated hydraulic conductivity (K-fs) of soils. The objectives of this investigation were to develop a procedure for estimating both the K-fs and the alpha* parameter of the exponential hydraulic conductivity function from a FH experiment, and to. compare FH procedures differing by experimental and computational demands. A total of 33 FH experiments were carried out on repacked, sandy loam and loam soil cores. A two level (TL) analysis was applied to determine a value of a* for each soil core. K-fs was then calculated by three different approaches, ranging from the fitting approach (FA) that used the measured a* value and all cumulative infiltration vs. time data pairs, to the Simplified Falling Head (SFH) approach, that used only the first and the last water level readings and reasonable estimates of alpha* taken from the literature. The TL analysis yielded plausible a* results, equal to 24.9m(-1) for the initially dry sandy loam soil and to 7.0-8.1 m(-1) for the initially dry loam soil and 66.9m(-1) for the initially wet loam soil. The mean values of Kfs obtained with the different FH approaches are 120.5-159.6mm h(-1) for the sandy loam soil and to 11.0-19.1 and 2.3-4.0 mm h- 1 for the initially dry and wet loam soil, respectively. Similar K-fs results were obtained by both the SFH approach and by the more complicated approaches yielding estimates of both alpha* and K-fs. It was concluded that (i) the SFH procedure produced results as good as the more data and time consuming procedures, and (ii) simple instrumentation and analytical methodology may be applied to obtain rapid and reasonable estimates of K-fs.

BAGARELLO V, ELRICK DE, IOVINO M, SGROI A (2006). A laboratory analysis of falling head infiltration procedures for estimating the hydraulic conductivity of soils. GEODERMA, 135, 322-334 [10.1016/j.geoderma.2005.12.008].

A laboratory analysis of falling head infiltration procedures for estimating the hydraulic conductivity of soils

BAGARELLO, Vincenzo;IOVINO, Massimo;SGROI, Angelo
2006-01-01

Abstract

Falling head (FH) infiltration procedures can give rapid estimates of the field saturated hydraulic conductivity (K-fs) of soils. The objectives of this investigation were to develop a procedure for estimating both the K-fs and the alpha* parameter of the exponential hydraulic conductivity function from a FH experiment, and to. compare FH procedures differing by experimental and computational demands. A total of 33 FH experiments were carried out on repacked, sandy loam and loam soil cores. A two level (TL) analysis was applied to determine a value of a* for each soil core. K-fs was then calculated by three different approaches, ranging from the fitting approach (FA) that used the measured a* value and all cumulative infiltration vs. time data pairs, to the Simplified Falling Head (SFH) approach, that used only the first and the last water level readings and reasonable estimates of alpha* taken from the literature. The TL analysis yielded plausible a* results, equal to 24.9m(-1) for the initially dry sandy loam soil and to 7.0-8.1 m(-1) for the initially dry loam soil and 66.9m(-1) for the initially wet loam soil. The mean values of Kfs obtained with the different FH approaches are 120.5-159.6mm h(-1) for the sandy loam soil and to 11.0-19.1 and 2.3-4.0 mm h- 1 for the initially dry and wet loam soil, respectively. Similar K-fs results were obtained by both the SFH approach and by the more complicated approaches yielding estimates of both alpha* and K-fs. It was concluded that (i) the SFH procedure produced results as good as the more data and time consuming procedures, and (ii) simple instrumentation and analytical methodology may be applied to obtain rapid and reasonable estimates of K-fs.
2006
BAGARELLO V, ELRICK DE, IOVINO M, SGROI A (2006). A laboratory analysis of falling head infiltration procedures for estimating the hydraulic conductivity of soils. GEODERMA, 135, 322-334 [10.1016/j.geoderma.2005.12.008].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10447/19037
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