Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment Columns

Transport from the soil surface to groundwater is commonly mediated through deeper portions of the vadose zone and capillary fringe, where variations in temperature and water saturation strongly influence biogeochemical processes. This technical note describes a sediment column design that allows la...

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Main Authors: Tetsu K. Tokunaga, Yongman Kim, Jiamin Wan, Markus Bill, Mark Conrad, Wenming Dong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-09-01
Series:Vadose Zone Journal
Online Access:https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/17/1/180085
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spelling doaj-429088b3f91b43469288803d4215f9152020-11-25T04:03:54ZengWileyVadose Zone Journal1539-16632018-09-0117110.2136/vzj2018.04.0085Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment ColumnsTetsu K. TokunagaYongman KimJiamin WanMarkus BillMark ConradWenming DongTransport from the soil surface to groundwater is commonly mediated through deeper portions of the vadose zone and capillary fringe, where variations in temperature and water saturation strongly influence biogeochemical processes. This technical note describes a sediment column design that allows laboratory simulation of thermal and hydrologic conditions found in many field settings. Temperature control is particularly important because room temperature is not representative of most subsurface environments. A 2.0-m-tall column was capable of simulating profiles with temperatures ranging from 3 to 22°C, encompassing the full range of seasonal temperature variation observed in the deep vadose zone and capillary fringe of a semiarid floodplain in western Colorado. The water table was varied within the lower 0.8-m section of the column, and profiles of water content and matric potential were measured. Vadose zone CO collected from depth-distributed gas samplers under representative seasonal conditions reflected the influences of temperature and water table depth on microbial respiration. Thus, realistic subsurface biogeochemical dynamics can be simulated in the laboratory through establishing column profiles that represent seasonal thermal and hydrologic conditions.https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/17/1/180085
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tetsu K. Tokunaga
Yongman Kim
Jiamin Wan
Markus Bill
Mark Conrad
Wenming Dong
spellingShingle Tetsu K. Tokunaga
Yongman Kim
Jiamin Wan
Markus Bill
Mark Conrad
Wenming Dong
Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment Columns
Vadose Zone Journal
author_facet Tetsu K. Tokunaga
Yongman Kim
Jiamin Wan
Markus Bill
Mark Conrad
Wenming Dong
author_sort Tetsu K. Tokunaga
title Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment Columns
title_short Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment Columns
title_full Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment Columns
title_fullStr Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment Columns
title_full_unstemmed Method for Controlling Temperature Profiles and Water Table Depths in Laboratory Sediment Columns
title_sort method for controlling temperature profiles and water table depths in laboratory sediment columns
publisher Wiley
series Vadose Zone Journal
issn 1539-1663
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Transport from the soil surface to groundwater is commonly mediated through deeper portions of the vadose zone and capillary fringe, where variations in temperature and water saturation strongly influence biogeochemical processes. This technical note describes a sediment column design that allows laboratory simulation of thermal and hydrologic conditions found in many field settings. Temperature control is particularly important because room temperature is not representative of most subsurface environments. A 2.0-m-tall column was capable of simulating profiles with temperatures ranging from 3 to 22°C, encompassing the full range of seasonal temperature variation observed in the deep vadose zone and capillary fringe of a semiarid floodplain in western Colorado. The water table was varied within the lower 0.8-m section of the column, and profiles of water content and matric potential were measured. Vadose zone CO collected from depth-distributed gas samplers under representative seasonal conditions reflected the influences of temperature and water table depth on microbial respiration. Thus, realistic subsurface biogeochemical dynamics can be simulated in the laboratory through establishing column profiles that represent seasonal thermal and hydrologic conditions.
url https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/17/1/180085
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