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Temperature effects on soil bulk dielectric permittivity measured by time domain reflectometry: Experimental evidence and hypothesis development
Author(s) -
Wraith Jon M.,
Or Dani
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1029/1998wr900006
Subject(s) - loam , reflectometry , soil water , soil science , dielectric , materials science , permittivity , silt , bound water , water content , dielectric permittivity , oxisol , environmental science , time domain , geology , chemistry , geotechnical engineering , optoelectronics , geomorphology , computer science , computer vision , organic chemistry , molecule
Reports on temperature ( T ) effects on time domain reflectometry (TDR) measurements of soil water content (θ) are contradictory and often exhibit conflicting trends. We imposed step T changes on sealed columns of four soils having variable θ, while monitoring bulk apparent dielectric constant (or permittivity ϵ b ) and bulk electrical conductivity (σ b ) using TDR. Measured ϵ b increased substantially with increasing temperature for one silt loam soil, for all θ. For another silt loam soil and for an Oxisol, measured ϵ b increased with increasing T at relatively low θ but decreased with increasing T at higher θ. For a sandy loam soil, measured ϵ b decreased with increasing T for all θ. The experimental results led to the hypothesis that TDR‐measured ϵ b is determined by an interplay between two competing phenomena: (1) the reduction in the dielectric constant of bulk water with increased T ; and (2) the increase in TDR‐measured ϵ b with increased T due to release of bound water. TDRmeasured ϵ b is thus dependent on solid surface area and wetness. Our results have implications for routine use of TDR in fine‐textured and organic soils and potentially for microwave remote sensing of soil water status.