TY - JOUR
T1 - Hydraulic conductivity of stratified unsaturated soils
T2 - Effects of random variability and layering
AU - Gohardoust, Mohammad R.
AU - Sadeghi, Morteza
AU - Ziatabar Ahmadi, Mirkhalegh
AU - Jones, Scott B.
AU - Tuller, Markus
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2017/3/1
Y1 - 2017/3/1
N2 - For simulating flow in heterogeneous porous media it is computationally more efficient to define an equivalent effective (i.e., upscaled) medium rather than considering detailed spatial heterogeneities. In this paper, the effective unsaturated hydraulic conductivity (K) of soils exhibiting random variability, layering, or both is calculated based on numerical simulations of steady-state evaporation from a shallow water table. It is demonstrated that the effective K of randomly-varied coarse-textured soils generally falls between the harmonic and geometric means of the unsaturated hydraulic conductivities of the constituting soils. Layering and random variability when occurring concurrently magnify each other's effects on effective K. As a result, the higher the degree of heterogeneity, the lower the effective K. Therefore, neglecting either random spatial variability or layering in numerical simulations can lead to significant overestimation of water flow in soils.
AB - For simulating flow in heterogeneous porous media it is computationally more efficient to define an equivalent effective (i.e., upscaled) medium rather than considering detailed spatial heterogeneities. In this paper, the effective unsaturated hydraulic conductivity (K) of soils exhibiting random variability, layering, or both is calculated based on numerical simulations of steady-state evaporation from a shallow water table. It is demonstrated that the effective K of randomly-varied coarse-textured soils generally falls between the harmonic and geometric means of the unsaturated hydraulic conductivities of the constituting soils. Layering and random variability when occurring concurrently magnify each other's effects on effective K. As a result, the higher the degree of heterogeneity, the lower the effective K. Therefore, neglecting either random spatial variability or layering in numerical simulations can lead to significant overestimation of water flow in soils.
KW - Effective unsaturated hydraulic conductivity
KW - Random variability
KW - Soil layering
KW - Steady state evaporation
KW - Upscaling
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2016.12.055
DO - 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2016.12.055
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85009420718
SN - 0022-1694
VL - 546
SP - 81
EP - 89
JO - Journal of Hydrology
JF - Journal of Hydrology
ER -