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Using a pore‐scale model to quantify the effect of particle re‐arrangement on pore structure and hydraulic properties
Authors:Oagile Dikinya  Peter Lehmann  Christoph Hinz  Graham Aylmore
Institution:1. School of Earth and Geographical Sciences M087, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley WA 6009;2. Permanent address: Department of Environmental Science, University of Botswana, Private Bag 0022, Gaborone, Botswana.;3. Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Universit?tstrasse 16, ETH Zentrum CHN, CH‐8092 Zürich, Switzerland;4. Laboratory of Soil & Environmental Physics Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, EPFL, CH‐1015, Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract:A pore‐scale model based on measured particle size distributions has been used to quantify the changes in pore space geometry of packed soil columns resulting from a dilution in electrolyte concentration from 500 to 1 mmol l?1 NaCl during leaching. This was applied to examine the effects of particle release and re‐deposition on pore structure and hydraulic properties. Two different soils, an agricultural soil and a mining residue, were investigated with respect to the change in hydraulic properties. The mining residue was much more affected by this process with the water saturated hydraulic conductivity decreasing to 0·4% of the initial value and the air‐entry value changing from 20 to 50 cm. For agricultural soil, there was little detectable shift in the water retention curve but the saturated hydraulic conductivity decreased to 8·5% of the initial value. This was attributed to localized pore clogging (similar to a surface seal) affecting hydraulic conductivity, but not the microscopically measured pore‐size distribution or water retention. We modelled the soil structure at the pore scale to explain the different responses of the two soils to the experimental conditions. The size of the pores was determined as a function of deposited clay particles. The modal pore size of the agricultural soil as indicated by the constant water retention curve was 45 µm and was not affected by the leaching process. In the case of the mining residue, the mode changed from 75 to 45 µm. This reduction of pore size corresponds to an increase of capillary forces that is related to the measured shift of the water retention curve. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:pore structure  particle size distribution  particle re‐arrangement  hydraulic properties  saturated hydraulic conductivity  soil water retention
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