1 / 28

Soil Water Potential

Soil Water Potential. Peter Cull ICT International. Water Content or Potential?. Water Content: Total amount of water in the soil Does not indicate how much is available to a plant. Water Potential: The amount of energy needed to extract water from soil

caden
Télécharger la présentation

Soil Water Potential

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Soil Water Potential Peter Cull ICT International

  2. Water Content or Potential? • Water Content: • Total amount of water in the soil • Does not indicate how much is available to a plant • Water Potential: • The amount of energy needed to extract water from soil • Direct measure of how much water is available to a plant

  3. Water Potential Units • Water Potential Units of Measurement: High Potential Low Potential

  4. Soil-Plant-Atmosphere Continuum

  5. Gypsum Blocks • Standard matrix equilibrates with soil • Electrical resistance proportional to water content of matrix • Inexpensive, but poor stability, accuracy and response • Sensitive to salts in soil

  6. MPS-2 Capacitance Sensor • Standard matrix equilibrates with soil • Water content of matrix is measured by capacitance • Stable (not subject to salts and dissolution) • Good accuracy from -0.01 to -0.5 MPa

  7. TM229 Thermal Matric Sensor • Robust (ceramic with embedded heater and temperature sensor) • Large measurement range (wet and dry end) • Stable (not subject to salts and dissolution • Requires complex temperature correction and calibration

  8. Tensiometers • Equilibrates water under tension with soil water through a porous cup • Measures tension of water • Highest accuracy of any sensor in wet range • Limited to potentials from 0 to -0.09 MPa • Significant maintenance requirements

  9. Limitations of Field Techniques • TM229 Thermal Matric Sensor: • Calibration essential • Relatively expensive • Gypsum Blocks: • Inaccurate • Requires individual calibration • Limited range: 0 to -500kPa • Tensiometers: • High maintenance • Limited range: 0 to -80kPa • MPS-2 Capacitance Sensor: • Inaccurate below -100kPa • Requires individual calibration • Limited range: 0 to -500kPa

  10. Lab Based Measurements Pressure Extractor WP4C DewpointPotentiameter

  11. Pressure Extractors • Apply known amount of pressure into a • sealed chamber and monitor outgoing • moisture • Long established, accepted technique • Excellent accuracy between • -0.03 and -1.5 MPa

  12. WP4C Dewpoint Potentiameter • Based on psychometric principle • Dew forms on small mirror inside measurement chamber • WP4C measures humidity and temperature when dew forms • Poor results at wet end, excellent results at dry end • Fast, accurate, easy maintenance

  13. Limitations of Lab Techniques • Pressure Extractors: • Slow and expensive • Limited range: -0.03 to -1.5 MPa • All Methods: • Destructive • Destroys soil structure • Artificial result • One-off, spot, measurement • No continuous, in-situ data • WP4C: • Small sample • Limited range: -0.1 to -300 MPa

  14. Lab & Field Technique • Moisture Release Curves: • Quantifying soil moisture content Against soil water potential for Varying Soil Textures • Standard practice to measure Between Field Capacity and Plant Wilting Point: -0.03 to -1.5 MPa

  15. SMM Soil Moisture Meter • Stand-alone data logging solution • Up to 10 sensor capacity • Wireless communication • Low power requirement • Real and virtual sensors

  16. SMM Soil Moisture Meter • Real and Virtual Channels: • 5 channels to measure moisture content • 5 virtual channels to measure soil water potential

  17. SMM Soil Moisture Meter • Calibration Feature: • Individual channel calibration • Precision measurement of soil moisture parameters in any soil type

  18. SMM – How it Works • Step 1: • Collect soils from field and air dry for 2 weeks • Step 2: • Sieve soil through 2mm sieve • Place in separate containers

  19. SMM – How it Works • Step 3: • 1st container, keep air dry • 2nd container, 1 unit of water • 3rd container, 2 units of water • 4th container, 3 units of water • and so on…

  20. SMM – How it Works • Step 4: • Measure soil with MP306 sensor in raw, millivolt format in all of the containers • Step 5: • Measure water potential of soil in each container with a WP4C or pressure extractor

  21. SMM – How it Works • Step 6: • Once water potential is known, determine volumetric water content with a balance and drying oven

  22. SMM – How it Works • Step 7: • Find equation from your moisture release curve Curve A Sandy Soil: Soil Water Potential = 5343 x Soil Water Content-1.852 Curve B Clay Soil: Soil Water Potential = 6x107 x Soil Water Content-4.228

  23. SMM – How it Works • Step 8: • Enter equation into the SMM software as a script

  24. SMM – How it Works • Step 9: • Connect sensors to SMM and install in the field. Start taking measurements!

  25. Simultaneous Content & Potential % Volumetric Water Content Soil Water Potential (kPa) Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6

  26. Virtual Channels = Flexibilty • SMM Soil Moisture Meter can handle other equations: • Hydraulic Conductivity; Degree of Saturation; Oxygen Content Water Potential and Water Content Hydraulic Conductivity and Water Content

  27. ICT International Pty Ltd Solutions for soil, plant and environmental research www.ictinternational.com sales@international.com.au Phone: 61 2 6772 6770 Fax: 61 2 6772 7616 PO Box 503, Armidale, NSW, Australia, 2350 INTERNATIONAL

More Related