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A novel approach to evaluate soil heat flux calculation: An analytical review of nine methods
Author(s) -
Gao Zhongming,
Russell Eric S.,
Missik Justine E. C.,
Huang Maoyi,
Chen Xingyuan,
Strickland Chris E.,
Clayton Ray,
Arntzen Evan,
Ma Yulong,
Liu Heping
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1002/2017jd027160
Subject(s) - energy balance , flux (metallurgy) , heat flux , diffusion , phase (matter) , thermal , materials science , computational physics , thermodynamics , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , physics , heat transfer , chromatography , organic chemistry , metallurgy
There are no direct methods to evaluate calculated soil heat flux (SHF) at the surface ( G 0 ). Instead, validation and cross evaluation of methods for calculating G 0 usually rely on the conventional calorimetric method or the degree of the surface energy balance closure. However, there is uncertainty in the calorimetric method itself, and factors apart from G 0 also contribute to nonclosure of the surface energy balance. Here we used a novel approach to evaluate nine different methods for calculating SHF, including the calorimetric method and methods based on analytical solutions of the heat diffusion equation. The SHF ( G z ) measured by a self‐calibrating SHF plate at a depth of z  = 5 cm below the surface (hereafter G m _5 cm ) was deployed as a reference. Each SHF calculation method was assessed by comparing the calculated G z at the same depth (hereafter G c _5 cm ) with G m _5 cm . The calorimetric method and simple measurement method performed best in determining G c _5 cm but still underestimated G m _5 cm by 19% during the daytime. Possible causes for this underestimation include errors and uncertainties in SHF measurements and soil thermal properties, as well as the phase lag between G c _5 cm and G m _5 cm . Our results indicate that the calorimetric method achieves the most accurate SHF estimates if self‐calibrating SHF plates are deployed at two depths (e.g., 5 cm and 10 cm), soil temperature and water content measurements are made in a few depths between the two plates, and soil thermal properties are accurately quantified.

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