An empirical soil water retention model based on probability laws for pore-size distribution

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjuan Zheng ◽  
Chongyang Shen ◽  
Lianping Wang ◽  
Yan Jin

<p>Knowledge of the soil water retention curve (SWRC) is critical to mathematical modeling of soil water dynamics in the vadose zone. Traditional SWRC models were developed based on bundles of cylindrical capillaries (BCCs) using a residual water content, which fail to accurately describe the dry end of the curve. This study improved and expanded on the traditional BCC models. Specifically, the total water retention was treated as a weighed superposition of capillary and adsorptive components.We proposed a mathematical continuous expression for<br />water retention from saturation to oven dryness, which also allowed for a partition of capillary and adsorptive retention. We further evaluated six capillary retention functions using different probability laws for pore-size distribution - namely, the log-logistic, Weibull, lognormal, two-parameter van Genuchten (VG), three-parameter VG (or Dagum), and Fredlund–Xing (FX) distributions. Model testing against 144 experimental data showed better agreement of the proposed model with experimental observations than the traditional approaches that use the residualwater content. The Dagum and FX distributions, which have one more degree of freedom, provided better agreement with experimental data than the other four distributions. The log-logistic and lognormal distributions fitted the experimental data better than the Weibull and VG distribution for loam soils. In addition, the fitted weighting factor w using the log-logistic and lognormal distributions better correlated to soil clay content than the other four distributions. Our study suggests that the log-logistic and lognormal distributions are more suitable to model soils’ pore-size distribution than other tested distributions.</p>

2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher T.S. Beckett ◽  
Charles E. Augarde

Several models have been suggested to link a soil's pore-size distribution to its retention properties. This paper presents a method that builds on previous techniques by incorporating porosity and particles of different sizes, shapes, and separation distances to predict soil water retention properties. Mechanisms are suggested for the determination of both the main drying and wetting paths, which incorporate an adsorbed water phase and retention hysteresis. Predicted results are then compared with measured retention data to validate the model and to provide a foundation for discussing the validity and limitations of using pore-size distributions to predict retention properties.


2007 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 407-437 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Seki

Abstract. The soil hydraulic parameters for analyzing soil water movement can be determined by fitting a soil water retention curve to a certain function, i.e., a soil hydraulic model. For this purpose, the program "SWRC Fit," which performs nonlinear fitting of soil water retention curves to 5 models by Levenberg-Marquardt method, was developed. The five models are the Brooks and Corey model, the van Genuchten model, Kosugi's log-normal pore-size distribution model, Durner's bimodal pore-size distribution model, and a bimodal log-normal pore-size distribution model propose in this study. This program automatically determines all the necessary conditions for the nonlinear fitting, such as the initial estimate of the parameters, and, therefore, users can simply input the soil water retention data to obtain the necessary parameters. The program can be executed directly from a web page at http://purl.org/net/swrc/; a client version of the software written in numeric calculation language GNU Octave is included in the electronic supplement of this paper. The program was used for determining the soil hydraulic parameters of 420 soils in UNSODA database. After comparing the root mean square error of the unimodal models, the van Genuchten and Kosugi's models were better than the Brooks and Corey model. The bimodal log-normal pore-size distribution model had similar fitting performance to Durner's bimodal pore-size distribution model.


2019 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johannes L. Jensen ◽  
Per Schjønning ◽  
Christopher W. Watts ◽  
Bent T. Christensen ◽  
Lars J. Munkholm

Soil Research ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 695 ◽  
Author(s):  
KRJ Smettem ◽  
PJ Gregory

The soil water retention curve (WRC) may be estimated from soil texture if there is shape similarity between the normalised cumulative particle mass size distribution curve (PSD) and the WRC. For similar shaped curves, parameters describing the shape of the PSD may also describe the shape of the corresponding WRC. We studied the relation between PSDs and WRCs at 4 sites in Western Australia with predominantly sandy soils and fitted a sigmoidal function to all normalised PSDs and WRCs. The model gave an excellent description of all PSD and WRC data sets. The parameter describing the slope of the WRC was correlated with the slope of the PSD. However, the asymptotic minima of the PSDs differed from the WRCs leading to poor estimates of the WRC residual water contents, θr. This difference was most marked in 2 clay subsoils and resulted in progressively greater errors in prediction of water content with increasing negative pressure head.


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