Premium
Three‐Porosity Model for Predicting the Gas Diffusion Coefficient in Undisturbed Soil
Author(s) -
Moldrup Per,
Olesen Torben,
Yoshikawa Seiko,
Komatsu Toshiko,
Rolston Dennis E.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
soil science society of america journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.836
H-Index - 168
eISSN - 1435-0661
pISSN - 0361-5995
DOI - 10.2136/sssaj2004.7500
Subject(s) - thermal diffusivity , soil water , porosity , soil science , diffusion , saturation (graph theory) , power function , environmental science , mineralogy , mathematics , chemistry , geology , thermodynamics , geotechnical engineering , physics , mathematical analysis , combinatorics
The soil gas diffusion coefficient ( D P ) and its dependency on air‐filled porosity (ε) govern most gas diffusion‐reaction processes in soil. Accurate D P (ε) prediction models for undisturbed soils are needed in vadose zone transport and fate models. The objective of this paper was to develop a D P (ε) model with lower input parameter requirement and similar prediction accuracy as recent soil‐type dependent models. Combining three gas diffusivity models: (i) a general power‐law D P (ε) model, (ii) the classical Buckingham (1904) model for D P at air saturation, and (iii) a recent macroporosity dependent model for D P at −100 cm H 2 O of soil–water matric potential (ψ), yielded a single equation to predict D P as a function of the actual ε, the total porosity (Φ), and the macroporosity (ε 100 ; defined as the air‐filled porosity at ψ = −100 cm H 2 O). The new model, termed the three‐porosity model (TPM), requires only one point (at −100 cm H 2 O) on the soil–water characteristic curve (SWC), compared with recent D P (ε) models that require knowledge of the entire SWC. The D P (ε) was measured at different ψ on undisturbed soil samples from dark‐red Latosols (Brazil) and Yellow soils (Japan), representing different tillage intensities. The TPM and five other D P (ε) models were tested against the new data (17 soils) and data from the literature for additional 43 undisturbed soils. The new TPM performed equally well (root mean square error [RMSE] in relative gas diffusivity <0.027) as recent SWC‐dependent D P (ε) models and better than typically used soil type independent models.