EGU21-1712
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1712
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Explicit comprehensive models for single ring infiltration: suggestions for model application and parameterization

Massimo Iovino1, Majdi R. Abou Najm2, Rafael Angulo-Jaramillo3, Vincenzo Bagarello1, Mirko Castellini4, Paola Concialdi1, Simone Di Prima5, Laurent Lassabatere3, and Ryan D. Stewart6
Massimo Iovino et al.
  • 1Department of Agricultural, Food and Forest Sciences, University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy (massimo.iovino@unipa.it)
  • 2Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, University of California, Davis CA, United States
  • 3UMR5023 Ecologie des Hydrosystèmes Naturels et Anthropisés, CNRS, ENTPE, Université Lyon 1, Vaulx-en-Velin, France.
  • 4Council for Agricultural Research and Economics - Agriculture and Environment Research Center (CREA-AA), Bari, Italy
  • 5Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Sassari, Sassari, Italy
  • 6School of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, United State

Stewart and Abou Najm (2018) developed a comprehensive model (SA model) for single ring infiltration that consists of a couple of two-terms explicit infiltration equations similar, in form, to the approximate expansions proposed by Haverkamp et al. (1994) (HV model). Application of SA model requires the transition time, τcrit, from transient to steady state to be known a-priori or establishing a constraint among the four constants that figure in the infiltration equations. Estimation of soil saturated hydraulic conductivity, Ks, and capillary length, λ, from single ring infiltration measurements also needs a scaling parameter referred to “a” to be known. SA model assumes this scaling parameter as a constant and fixes its value at a = 0.45. However, there is evidence that a cannot be considered a constant independent of soil type and initial water content.

This study investigates some open issues related to the use of the SA model for single ring infiltration: 1) how comparable is τcrit with the maximum time, tmax, that separates transient from steady state condition in HV model; 2) how the scaling parameter a depends on different experimental conditions and how it can be related to HV parameters.

Preliminary theoretical considerations showed that the two characteristic times (τcrit and tmax) are related and, for relatively dry initial conditions, parameter a depends only on the soil type and ring radius being maximum for small ring radii or soils with high capillarity (a = 1) and minimum for large rings or coarse soils (a = 0.467).

An optimization procedure, with a constraint among the four infiltration constants, was applied to fit the SA model to both analytical and experimental infiltration data to derive  τcrit and the associated value of a.

The analytical data confirmed that the ratio τcrit/tmax was constant and equal to 1.495, regardless the combination of soil, ring diameter and initial water saturation. The calculated a values varied between 0.706 and 0.904, with a mean equal to a = 0.807, and were independent of the initial water content for saturation degrees up to approximately 0.50.

Application of the optimization procedure to field data was problematic given it was successful only in 29 out of 70 infiltration tests. Fixing τcrita-priori could be advisable in this case and it was shown that two alternative empirical criteria for selecting τcrit yielded a values differing by a nearly negligible mean factor of 1.10 and significantly correlated to one another (R2 = 0.997).

However, a rather high percentage of a values (45.5%) were greater than the theoretical maximum value (a = 1), and therefore were physically implausible. Excluding these values from the analysis, the mean a parameter (a = 0.735) was close to that estimated by the successful applications of the optimization procedure (a = 0.673).

Therefore, consistent results were obtained by field and analytical data with a values intermediate between the suggested values in the literature (a = 0.45 and 0.91). These findings can inform parameterization choices for others working with infiltration models, and should reduce uncertainty during interpretation of infiltration measurements.

How to cite: Iovino, M., Abou Najm, M. R., Angulo-Jaramillo, R., Bagarello, V., Castellini, M., Concialdi, P., Di Prima, S., Lassabatere, L., and Stewart, R. D.: Explicit comprehensive models for single ring infiltration: suggestions for model application and parameterization, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-1712, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-1712, 2021.

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