Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil

Ring infiltration methods are widely used for field soil hydraulic characterization. Establishing factors affecting these methods is necessary to interpret the collected data. The height from which water is poured on the soil surface is known to influence infiltration in a sandy-loam soil, since low...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: V. Bagarello, N. Cecere, S. Di Prima, G. Giordano, M. Iovino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2017-06-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/1385
id doaj-5e131e25646046b3993f222a383f28e6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5e131e25646046b3993f222a383f28e62021-02-18T21:00:30ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162017-06-015810.3303/CET1758121Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil V. BagarelloN. CecereS. Di PrimaG. GiordanoM. IovinoRing infiltration methods are widely used for field soil hydraulic characterization. Establishing factors affecting these methods is necessary to interpret the collected data. The height from which water is poured on the soil surface is known to influence infiltration in a sandy-loam soil, since low (L, height of water pouring 0.03 m) runs yielded higher infiltration rates than high (H, 1.5 m) runs in previous investigations. The impact of water pouring height on infiltration rates seems to vary with the antecedent soil water content, θi. In this investigation, height effects on infiltration were tested for an initially very wet sandy-loam soil. Two-stage infiltration runs differing by the height of water pouring in the second stage of the run (L1L2 and L1H2 runs) were carried out. With the L1L2 runs, the final infiltration rate and the duration of the second stage were 2.2 times lower and longer, respectively, than the corresponding values of the first stage. With the L1H2 runs, the corresponding factors of difference were 5.5 and 4.5, respectively. Therefore, the perturbation due to a high height of water pouring was also detectable in initially wet soil conditions. Disturbance due to a high height of pouring was reduced in more compact soil conditions. In conclusion, the low-high infiltration run methodology seems usable in general to detect the effects of the water application procedure on infiltration. The dry soil bulk density appears useful to predict disturbance effects caused by the infiltration run. https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/1385
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author V. Bagarello
N. Cecere
S. Di Prima
G. Giordano
M. Iovino
spellingShingle V. Bagarello
N. Cecere
S. Di Prima
G. Giordano
M. Iovino
Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet V. Bagarello
N. Cecere
S. Di Prima
G. Giordano
M. Iovino
author_sort V. Bagarello
title Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil
title_short Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil
title_full Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil
title_fullStr Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil
title_full_unstemmed Height of Water Pouring Effects on Infiltration Runs Carried Out in an Initially Wet Sandy-loam Soil
title_sort height of water pouring effects on infiltration runs carried out in an initially wet sandy-loam soil
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Ring infiltration methods are widely used for field soil hydraulic characterization. Establishing factors affecting these methods is necessary to interpret the collected data. The height from which water is poured on the soil surface is known to influence infiltration in a sandy-loam soil, since low (L, height of water pouring 0.03 m) runs yielded higher infiltration rates than high (H, 1.5 m) runs in previous investigations. The impact of water pouring height on infiltration rates seems to vary with the antecedent soil water content, θi. In this investigation, height effects on infiltration were tested for an initially very wet sandy-loam soil. Two-stage infiltration runs differing by the height of water pouring in the second stage of the run (L1L2 and L1H2 runs) were carried out. With the L1L2 runs, the final infiltration rate and the duration of the second stage were 2.2 times lower and longer, respectively, than the corresponding values of the first stage. With the L1H2 runs, the corresponding factors of difference were 5.5 and 4.5, respectively. Therefore, the perturbation due to a high height of water pouring was also detectable in initially wet soil conditions. Disturbance due to a high height of pouring was reduced in more compact soil conditions. In conclusion, the low-high infiltration run methodology seems usable in general to detect the effects of the water application procedure on infiltration. The dry soil bulk density appears useful to predict disturbance effects caused by the infiltration run.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/1385
work_keys_str_mv AT vbagarello heightofwaterpouringeffectsoninfiltrationrunscarriedoutinaninitiallywetsandyloamsoil
AT ncecere heightofwaterpouringeffectsoninfiltrationrunscarriedoutinaninitiallywetsandyloamsoil
AT sdiprima heightofwaterpouringeffectsoninfiltrationrunscarriedoutinaninitiallywetsandyloamsoil
AT ggiordano heightofwaterpouringeffectsoninfiltrationrunscarriedoutinaninitiallywetsandyloamsoil
AT miovino heightofwaterpouringeffectsoninfiltrationrunscarriedoutinaninitiallywetsandyloamsoil
_version_ 1724262390301720576