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000021587 084__ $$2WoS$$aEnvironmental Sciences
000021587 084__ $$2WoS$$aSoil Science
000021587 084__ $$2WoS$$aWater Resources
000021587 1001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)129436$$aBechtold, M.$$b0$$uFZJ
000021587 245__ $$aUpward transport in a three-dimensional heterogeneous laboratory soil under evaporation conditions
000021587 260__ $$aMadison, Wis.$$bSSSA$$c2012
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000021587 440_0 $$010301$$aVadose Zone Journal$$v11$$x1539-1663$$y2
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000021587 500__ $$aThis study was funded by the network EOS (www.netzwerk-eos.dlr.de). We are grateful for the help of Robert Schroder, Odilia Esser, Anke Langen, and many more during the construction of the experimental setup. We thank Mathieu Javaux for providing the MATLAB library for convection-dispersion analytical solutions (CASlib), Johannes Koestel for making his MATLAB code for the ERT error estimation available, and Horst Hardelauf for support in coupling PARTRACE with the finite-volume flow model. We thank Niklas Linde for several useful comments.
000021587 520__ $$aUpward water flow induced by evaporation can cause soil salinization and transport of contaminants to the soil surface and influences the migration of solutes to the groundwater. In this study, we used electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) to obtain time-lapse images of an upward-flow tracer experiment under evaporation conditions in a three-dimensional, spatially correlated heterogeneous laboratory soil composed of three different materials (coarse-, medium-, and fine-grained sands). The tracer experiment was performed during 40 d of quasi-steady-state, upward-flow conditions. Monitored transport was compared with three-dimensional numerical simulation based on the Richards and advection-dispersion equations. The ERT-derived and modeled solute transport correlated well in the lower part of the laboratory soil, while deviations increased toward the surface. Inversion of synthetic ERT data indicated that deviations cannot be explained by ERT data and inversion errors only, but also errors of the flow and transport model must be invoked. The classical potential/actual evaporation (E-pot/E-a) concept underestimated the experimental evaporation, as locally E-a exceeded E-pot, which was determined as the maximum evaporation from an insulated free water table minus soil heat flux. Increasing the potential evaporation rate uniformly in the model, so that wet high-evaporation zones can compensate for lower evaporation from dry zones, increased the correlation between experiment and model. Despite the remaining deviations, experiment and model showed a consistent and systematic pattern of preferential upward transport pathways. Close above the water table, most of the transport occurred in the coarse material, while with increasing height, transport was dominated by the finer materials. This study is an experimental benchmark for three-dimensional flow and transport models using simplified evaporation boundary conditions and for ERT to monitor upward transport.
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000021587 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)129548$$aVanderborght, J.$$b1$$uFZJ
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000021587 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)129469$$aHerbst, M.$$b3$$uFZJ
000021587 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aGünther, T.$$b4
000021587 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aIppisch, O.$$b5
000021587 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)VDB724$$aKasteel, R.$$b6$$uFZJ
000021587 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)129549$$aVereecken, H.$$b7$$uFZJ
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