Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport

Preferential flow is a widespread phenomenon that is known to strongly affect solute transport in soil, but our understanding and knowledge is still poor of the site factors and soil properties that promote it. To investigate these relationships, we assembled a database from the peer-reviewed litera...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J. K. Koestel, J. Moeys, N. J. Jarvis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2012-06-01
Series:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Online Access:http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/16/1647/2012/hess-16-1647-2012.pdf
id doaj-492913a77bda40ac8c6de1765a3a0969
record_format Article
spelling doaj-492913a77bda40ac8c6de1765a3a09692020-11-24T22:18:00ZengCopernicus PublicationsHydrology and Earth System Sciences1027-56061607-79382012-06-011661647166510.5194/hess-16-1647-2012Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transportJ. K. KoestelJ. MoeysN. J. JarvisPreferential flow is a widespread phenomenon that is known to strongly affect solute transport in soil, but our understanding and knowledge is still poor of the site factors and soil properties that promote it. To investigate these relationships, we assembled a database from the peer-reviewed literature containing information on 733 breakthrough curve experiments under steady-state flow conditions. Most of the collected experiments (585 of the 733 datasets) had been conducted on undisturbed soil columns, although some experiments on repacked soil, clean sands, and glass beads were also included. In addition to the apparent dispersivity, we focused our attention on three indicators of preferential solute transport: namely the 5%-arrival time, the holdback factor, and the ratio of piston-flow and average transport velocities. Our results suggest that, in contrast to the 5%-arrival time and the holdback factor, the piston-flow to transport velocity ratio is not related to preferential macropore transport but rather to the exclusion or retardation of the applied tracer. Confirming that the apparent longitudinal dispersivity is positively correlated with the travel distance of the tracer, our results also illustrate that this relationship is refined if the normalized 5%-tracer arrival time is also taken into account. In particular, we found that the degree of preferential solute transport increases with apparent dispersivity and decreases with travel distance. A similar but weaker relationship was observed between apparent dispersivity, 5%-tracer arrival time, and lateral observation scale, such that the degree of preferential transport increases with lateral observation scale. However, we also found that the travel distance and the lateral observation scale in the investigated dataset are correlated, which makes it difficult to distinguish their influence on these transport characteristics. We also found that the strength of preferential transport increased at larger flow rates and water saturations, which suggests that macropore flow was a more important flow mechanism than heterogeneous flow in the soil matrix. Nevertheless, our data show that heterogeneous flow in the soil matrix also occasionally leads to strong preferential transport. Furthermore, we show that preferential solute transport under steady-state flow depends on soil texture in a threshold-like manner: moderate to strong preferential transport was found to occur only for undisturbed soils that contain more than 8% clay. Preferential flow characteristics were also absent for columns filled with glass beads, clean sands, or sieved soil. No clear effect of land use on the pattern of solute transport could be discerned, probably because the available dataset was too small and too strongly affected by cross-correlations with experimental conditions. Our results suggest that, in developing pedotransfer functions for solute transport properties of soils, it is critically important to account for travel distance, lateral observation scale, and water flow rate and saturation.http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/16/1647/2012/hess-16-1647-2012.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. K. Koestel
J. Moeys
N. J. Jarvis
spellingShingle J. K. Koestel
J. Moeys
N. J. Jarvis
Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
author_facet J. K. Koestel
J. Moeys
N. J. Jarvis
author_sort J. K. Koestel
title Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport
title_short Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport
title_full Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport
title_fullStr Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport
title_full_unstemmed Meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport
title_sort meta-analysis of the effects of soil properties, site factors and experimental conditions on solute transport
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
issn 1027-5606
1607-7938
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Preferential flow is a widespread phenomenon that is known to strongly affect solute transport in soil, but our understanding and knowledge is still poor of the site factors and soil properties that promote it. To investigate these relationships, we assembled a database from the peer-reviewed literature containing information on 733 breakthrough curve experiments under steady-state flow conditions. Most of the collected experiments (585 of the 733 datasets) had been conducted on undisturbed soil columns, although some experiments on repacked soil, clean sands, and glass beads were also included. In addition to the apparent dispersivity, we focused our attention on three indicators of preferential solute transport: namely the 5%-arrival time, the holdback factor, and the ratio of piston-flow and average transport velocities. Our results suggest that, in contrast to the 5%-arrival time and the holdback factor, the piston-flow to transport velocity ratio is not related to preferential macropore transport but rather to the exclusion or retardation of the applied tracer. Confirming that the apparent longitudinal dispersivity is positively correlated with the travel distance of the tracer, our results also illustrate that this relationship is refined if the normalized 5%-tracer arrival time is also taken into account. In particular, we found that the degree of preferential solute transport increases with apparent dispersivity and decreases with travel distance. A similar but weaker relationship was observed between apparent dispersivity, 5%-tracer arrival time, and lateral observation scale, such that the degree of preferential transport increases with lateral observation scale. However, we also found that the travel distance and the lateral observation scale in the investigated dataset are correlated, which makes it difficult to distinguish their influence on these transport characteristics. We also found that the strength of preferential transport increased at larger flow rates and water saturations, which suggests that macropore flow was a more important flow mechanism than heterogeneous flow in the soil matrix. Nevertheless, our data show that heterogeneous flow in the soil matrix also occasionally leads to strong preferential transport. Furthermore, we show that preferential solute transport under steady-state flow depends on soil texture in a threshold-like manner: moderate to strong preferential transport was found to occur only for undisturbed soils that contain more than 8% clay. Preferential flow characteristics were also absent for columns filled with glass beads, clean sands, or sieved soil. No clear effect of land use on the pattern of solute transport could be discerned, probably because the available dataset was too small and too strongly affected by cross-correlations with experimental conditions. Our results suggest that, in developing pedotransfer functions for solute transport properties of soils, it is critically important to account for travel distance, lateral observation scale, and water flow rate and saturation.
url http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/16/1647/2012/hess-16-1647-2012.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jkkoestel metaanalysisoftheeffectsofsoilpropertiessitefactorsandexperimentalconditionsonsolutetransport
AT jmoeys metaanalysisoftheeffectsofsoilpropertiessitefactorsandexperimentalconditionsonsolutetransport
AT njjarvis metaanalysisoftheeffectsofsoilpropertiessitefactorsandexperimentalconditionsonsolutetransport
_version_ 1725783443876347904