Premium
Steady infiltration from spheroidal cavities in isotropic and anisotropic soils
Author(s) -
Philip J. R.
Publication year - 1986
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/wr022i013p01874
Subject(s) - permeameter , anisotropy , isotropy , dimensionless quantity , soil water , hydraulic conductivity , rotational symmetry , geometry , materials science , infiltration (hvac) , borehole , mechanics , physics , geotechnical engineering , geology , optics , mathematics , soil science , composite material
Solutions are given for quasilinear steady infiltration from spheroidal cavities (with axis of rotational symmetry vertical) of arbitrary aspect ratio v into isotropic and anisotropic homogeneous soils. The conductivity tensor is assumed to have principal components K (Ψ), K (Ψ), and μ 2 K (Ψ), the third of these in the vertical direction. Here μ 2 is the anisotropy, and Ψ is the moisture potential. Scattering analog techniques are used to secure the required solutions. The exact solutions involve spheroidal wave functions; but, more usefully, we express the far field wetting function and the discharge function as expansions appropriate for small and large values of s , the dimensionless transformed equatorial radius of the cavity. A joining technique is used to establish estimates of the discharge function throughout the ranges 0 ≤ s ≤ ∞, 0 ≤ ω ≤ 20, with transformed aspect ratio ω = μ −1 v . The effect of anisotropy on cavity discharge increases systematically both as v decreases from ∞ to 0, and as σ( = μ −1 s ) increases from 0 to ∞. This behavior is explained physically in terms of interaction between, on the one hand, cavity configuration and orientation, and, on the other, the relative importance of capillarity and gravity. The analysis provides means of improving the approximate analysis of the borehole permeameter in isotropic soils, and of investigating the properties of borehole and disc permeameters in unsaturated anisotropic soils.