413-11
Field Test and Sensitivity Analysis Of a Sensible Heat Balance Method To Determine Rates Of Soil Freezing and Thawing.

Poster Number 2526

Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Tampa Convention Center, East Hall, Third Floor

Yuki Kojima, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, Joshua L. Heitman, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, Gerald N. Flerchinger, USDA-ARS, Boise, ID, Tusheng Ren, Department of Soil & Water, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China and Robert Horton, Agronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, IA
A sensible heat balance (SHB) method using a sequence of heat pulse probes has the possibility of being applied to soil freezing and thawing to determine ice content changes with depth and time. However, feasibility of the SHB method is unknown because of the difficulties of measuring soil thermal properties in partially frozen soils. The objective of this study is to examine the SHB method for determining soil freezing and thawing rates in field conditions.

Thermo-TDR probes were installed in a bare field to measure subsurface soil temperatures, thermal properties, and liquid phase water contents in the 3 to 147 mm soil layer in the 2012-2013 winter season. In situ subsurface soil ice content as a function of time and depth were determined at 60-min intervals following the SHB theory. A sensitivity analysis of temperature, heat capacity, thermal conductivity, and time step interval of the SHB method was performed based on numerically produced soil freezing and thawing events.

The results showed that the in-situ ice contents from the SHB method were sometimes unrealistically large or even negative. Thermal conductivity errors and time step interval were the key factors attributing to the errors and instability in the SHB method while temperature and heat capacity showed less influences. To obtain reliable ice content with the SHB method, the required measurement accuracies of soil temperature and thermal conductivity were ±0.02°C and ±5%, respectively. The accuracy of soil heat capacity could be as large as ±50%. The time interval of SHB measurement was another critical factor. A 15 min SHB interval produced more accurate estimation of ice content than that of a 60-min interval. Shorter interval of temperature measurement may help to reduce the impact of thermal conductivity errors. We concluded that accurate thermal conductivity and relatively short time step are required to accurately estimate ice content with the SHB method.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics
See more from this Session: General Soil Physics: II

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