
Visualizing Unsaturated Flow Phenomena Using High‐Resolution Reflection Ground Penetrating Radar
Author(s) -
Haarder Eline B.,
Looms Majken C.,
Jensen Karsten H.,
Nielsen Lars
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
vadose zone journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.036
H-Index - 81
ISSN - 1539-1663
DOI - 10.2136/vzj2009.0188
Subject(s) - ground penetrating radar , infiltration (hvac) , vadose zone , geology , reflection (computer programming) , water content , soil science , remote sensing , mineralogy , radar , geotechnical engineering , soil water , materials science , composite material , telecommunications , computer science , programming language
Unsaturated flow phenomena, such as unstable wetting fronts and preferential flow, cannot be investigated using small‐scale sampling. Dye tracer experiments can help visualize the dynamics of water flow but are destructive and therefore irreproducible. We investigated the applicability of high‐resolution ground penetrating radar (GPR) for nondestructive visualization of unsaturated flow patterns arising from a forced infiltration experiment. Synthetic studies using a reflection GPR two‐dimensional finite difference time domain modeling code indicated that differences in water content caused by preferential flow and fingering could be resolved. Moisture content contrasts down to approximately 2.5% within the top 2 m were detectable, but with increasing degrees of heterogeneity in the subsurface it becomes difficult to distinguish these moisture content changes. We conducted a field experiment in which 100 mm (900 L) of Brilliant Blue dyed water was infiltrated across a 3‐ by 3‐m area in relatively homogenous and undisturbed sandy alluvial sediments. Reflection GPR data were collected before and after infiltration. Dye‐staining patterns, revealed by excavating a 2‐m‐deep trench through the infiltration area, were compared with changes in the GPR data. Reflection amplitude changes as well as reflection delay revealed significant differences within the dye‐stained area. The GPR data provided information about the unsaturated flow below the extent of the dye staining, and the results of the synthetic GPR modeling, as well as the observed changes in the real GPR data set, underline the potential of reflection GPR as a nondestructive method to map unsaturated flow phenomena.