figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) control volume for...

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Page 1: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated
Page 2: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235)(a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated porous medium (from Chow et al. (1988)).

Page 3: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Porous media definitions

[Note: Many are analogous to snow properties.]

Soil matrix properties:

particle density

bulk density

porosity

ρm =mass of mineral grains

volume of mineral grains=

M m

Vm

; typically ρm ≈ 2650 kg m-3

ρb =mass of mineral grains

volume of soil=

M m

Vs

φ =n = θ s =volume of voids

volume of soil=

Vvoid

Vs

→ φ = 1 −ρb

ρm

Water content variables: (only relevant for unsaturated zone)

volumetric water content

relative saturation

θ =volume of water

volume of soil=

Vw

Vs

; 0 ≤ θ ≤ θ s

s =θθs

; 0 ≤s≤1

Page 4: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

[Note: Soil type/texture is used to identify soil hydraulic properties via tabulated relationships.]

Page 5: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

porosity

Sat. hydraulic

conductivity (Ks)

Sat. matric head (|ψs|)

“Brooks-Corey” or “Clapp-Hornberger” Soil Hydraulic Parameters (based on soil type)

Page 6: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Table 7.4.1 (p. 241)Green-Ampt Infiltration Parameters for Various Soil Classes

Page 7: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Figure 7.4.3 (p. 237)Moisture zones during infiltration (from Chow et al. (1988)).

Page 8: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Figure 7.4.4 (p. 237)Moisture profile as a function of time for water added to the soil surface.

Page 9: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Figure 7.4.5 (p. 238)Rainfall infiltration rate and cumulative infiltration. The rainfall hyetograph illustrates the rainfall pattern as a function of time. The cumulative infiltration at time t is Ft or F(t) and at time t + Δt is Ft + Δt or F(t + Δt) is computed using equation 7.4.15. The increase in cumulative infiltration from time t to t + Δt is Ft + Δt – Ft or F(t + Δt) – F(t) as shown

in the figure. Rainfall excess is defined in Chapter 8 as that rainfall that is neither retained on the land surface nor infiltrated into the soil.

Page 10: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Figure 7.4.6 (p. 238)Variables in the Green-Ampt infiltration model. The vertical axis is the distance from the soil surface, the horizontal axis is the moisture content of the soil (from Chow et al. (1988)).

Page 11: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Figure 7.4.8 (p. 243)Ponding time. This figure illustrates the concept of ponding time for a constant intensity rainfall. Ponding time is the elapsed time between the time rainfall begins and the time water begins to pond on the soil surface.

Page 12: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

f (t) =P , t0 < t≤tp

fc(t−tc) , tp ≤t≤tr

⎧⎨⎪

⎩⎪

Modeling Actual Infiltration using the time-compression approximation (TCA)

Actual infiltration model:

Page 13: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

TCA condition #1:

Page 14: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

TCA condition #2:

fc (t)dt =P ⋅tp0

tp−tc

Page 15: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

Depending on the particular infiltration capacity model chosen (Philip or Green-Ampt), the two TCA conditions (equations) can be solved explicitly for the two unknowns (time to ponding and compression time) to get an explicit expression for the actual infiltration: f(t).

See supplementary TCA notes for more details…

Page 16: Figure 7.4.2 (p. 235) (a) Cross-section through an unsaturated porous medium; (b) Control volume for development of the continuity equation in an unsaturated

F = f(t)0

tr

∫ dt= P0

tp

∫ dt + fc(t−tc) dttp

tr

Q = P− f(t)0

tr

∫ dt= P− fc(t−tc) dttp

tr

∫ =Ptr −F

From actual infiltration model, can compute cumulative infiltration and/or infiltration excess runoff: