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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 63:255-263 (1999)
© 1999 Soil Science Society of America
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In Situ Measurement of Solute Transport Coefficients: Assumptions and Errors

V. O. Snow*

CSIRO Land and Water, G.P.O. Box 1666, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia

*Corresponding author (val.snow{at}cbr.clw.csiro.au).

ABSTRACT

Single-tracer and sequential-tracer techniques for directly measuring the immobile water content, {theta}im, and a sequential-tracer technique for measuring the solute transfer rate coefficient, {alpha}, have been proposed. These techniques have not been subjected to a comprehensive analysis of their assumptions, nor of the errors resulting if those assumptions are violated. Here, an analytical solution to the mobile-immobile convection-dispersion equation was used to assess the range of soil and sampling conditions that can lead to accurate estimates of {theta}im and {alpha}. Both techniques were shown to result in considerable error in soils possessing high dispersivity ({lambda}) and high {alpha} when conductivity (q) was low, or if sampling was done when the cumulative infiltration (I) was too small. For a wide range of conditions, the single-tracer technique resulted in estimates of {theta}im within 15% of the true value if sampling took place when q > 10 mm h-1, I > {lambda}, and sampling time <1.25 h. The value of {theta}m/{theta} had only a small effect on appropriate sampling conditions. Sampling conditions were more restrictive for the sequential-tracer technique than for the single-tracer technique. When {theta}m/{theta} {approx} 0.6, if {lambda} {approx} 5 mm and q > 10 mm h-1, and I > 30 mm, acceptable values of {theta}im and {alpha} were calculated. Sampling conditions became more restrictive as {lambda} increased. If {lambda} > 20 mm, there seemed little possibility for obtaining reasonable estimates of either {theta}im or {alpha}. Sampling conditions varied strongly with {theta}m/{theta}, becoming more lenient as {theta}m/{theta} decreased.

Received for publication April 29, 1998.


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