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Hydraulic properties of adsorbed water films in unsaturated porous media
Author(s) -
Tokunaga Tetsu K.
Publication year - 2009
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 - 10.1029/2009wr007734
Subject(s) - hydraulic conductivity , adsorption , materials science , porous medium , scaling , water flow , porosity , mineralogy , composite material , soil water , geotechnical engineering , soil science , chemistry , geology , geometry , mathematics , organic chemistry
Adsorbed water films strongly influence residual water saturations and hydraulic conductivities in porous media at low saturations. Hydraulic properties of adsorbed water films in unsaturated porous media were investigated through combining Langmuir's film model with scaling analysis, without use of any adjustable parameters. Diffuse double‐layer influences are predicted to be important through the strong dependence of adsorbed water film thickness ( f ) on matric potential ( ψ ) and ion charge ( z ). Film thickness, film velocity, and unsaturated hydraulic conductivity are predicted to vary with z −1 , z −2 , and z −3 , respectively. In monodisperse granular media, the characteristic grain size ( λ ) controls film hydraulics through λ −1 scaling of (1) the perimeter length per unit cross‐sectional area over which films occur, (2) the critical matric potential ( ψ c ) below which films control flow, and (3) the magnitude of the unsaturated hydraulic conductivity when ψ < ψ c . While it is recognized that finer‐textured sediments have higher unsaturated hydraulic conductivities than coarser sands at intermediate ψ , the λ −1 scaling of hydraulic conductivity predicted here extends this understanding to very low saturations where all pores are drained. Extremely low unsaturated hydraulic conductivities are predicted under adsorbed film‐controlled conditions (generally <0.1 mm a −1 ). On flat surfaces, the film hydraulic diffusivity is shown to be constant (invariant with respect to ψ ).