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Values from Table

m-3
Other values….

Thermal admittance of dry soil ~ 102 J m-2 s-1/2 K-1


Thermal admittance of wet saturated soil ~ 103 J m-2 s-1/2 K-1
Soil density, thermal conductivity, thermal
admittance.

Elevated %
of quartz and
clay minerals Water content

Sandy High values

Clay

Peat Low
values

Elevated %
of organic
matter
(this is only qualitative
the relations are non
linear)
Amplitude of the temperature wave at the surface
DT.

Elevated %
of quartz and
clay minerals Water content

Sandy Low
values
Clay

Peat
High values

Elevated %
of organic
matter
(this is only qualitative
the relations are non
linear)
Specific heat

Elevated %
of quartz and
clay minerals Water content

Low values
Sandy
Clay

Peat
High
values
Elevated %
of organic
matter
(this is only qualitative
the relations are non
linear)
Thermal diffusivity.

Elevated %
of quartz and
clay minerals Water content

Sandy High values

Clay

Peat
Low values Low values

Elevated %
of organic
matter
(this is only qualitative
the relations are non
linear)
Examples:

Dry Sandy Soil (40% pore space)

soil density   s  1.6  103 kg m -3


specific heat  cs  0.8  103 J kg 1 K - 1
thermal conductivity  k  0 .3 W m - 1 K - 1

Heat Capacity  C s   s c s  1.28 106 J m - 3 K - 1

 0.24 106 m 2 s - 1
k
Thermal diffusivity   
scs
Thermal admittance   C s k  620 J m - 2 s - 1/2 K - 1
2
Damping depth (daily cycle)  z D   0.08 m

2
Damping depth (annual cycle)  z D   1.5 m

For a maximum Ground Heat Flux of 200W/m2 the
temperature variation between night and day is
Q
DT  G  38o C
 
Saturated Sandy Soil (40% pore space)

soil density   s  2.0  103 kg m -3


specific heat  cs  1.48  103 J kg 1 K - 1
thermal conductivity  k  2 .2 W m - 1 K - 1

Heat Capacity  C s   s c s  2.96 106 J m - 3 K - 1

 0.74 10 6 m 2 s - 1
k
Thermal diffusivity   
scs
Thermal admittance  C s k  2550 J m - 2 s - 1/2 K - 1
2
Damping depth (daily cycle)  z D   0.14 m

2
Damping depth (annual cycle)  z D   2.7 m

For a maximum Ground Heat Flux of 200W/m2 the
temperature variation between night and day is
Q
DT  G 9oC
 
Limitations of the previous approach:
•Measurements show that the ground heat flux is not
sinusoidal in time. In particular during night-time is
more uniform and much flatter.
•The assumed sinusoidal variation of the surface
temperature may be not realistic.
•The simplifying assumption of the homogeneity of the
submedium is often not realized.

max

min
9 hrs
1st approach:Statistical parameterizations
Reasonable expectation that QG is a fraction of
Q* forcing. The surface QG leads the Q*
forcing by about 3 hours. Therefore a daily plot
of QG vs Q* results in a hysteresis loop
This loop can be modeled as

 Q * 
QG  aQ * b c
 t 

Where a, b, c are deduced from measurements.


Ex. For bare soil (Novak, 1981):
a=0.38,b=0.56 hrs, and c=-27.3 W m-2

This approach ignores the role of wind


(Convection) in heat sharing at the surface
2nd approach: physically based models

They take into account net radiation, latent and


sensible heat fluxes at the surface

The Force-Restore method (Deardorff, 1978)

Two layer approximation

A shallow thermally active layer near the surface, and


a thicker layer below.
Energy budget of the shallow layer

TG 1  *
  Q  Q H  Q E  QG d 
t cd  

Q* QH QE

QG ( d )

Q*=net radiation N.B. Non radiative


QE=Latent Heat Flux positive fluxes are
QH=Sensible Heat Flux directed away from the
QG =Ground Heat Flux surface. QH and QE are
TG=ground temperature positive when upward, QG
of the shallow layer when downward. Q*
d= depth of the shallow (radiative flux) is positive
layer when downward.
C= specific heat
soil density
c=Cs is the heat
capacity of the
Dz
soil, function of
the water content.

Assuming that
T T
QG ( d )  k m G
Dz
with Tm temperature of the
thick layer
TG 1  * k TG  Tm
  Q  Q H  Q E  
t C sd   C sd Dz

from the definition of damping depth


and thermal diffusivity
1/ 2
 2  k
zD    , 
  Cs
z 2 C
2  2 k s
zD k D
C s 2

CG C s d
is the heat capacity per unit area
of the near ground soil layer
2
TG 1  * z T  Tm
  Q  Q H  Q E   D G
t CG   2d Dz

assuming d  z D and Dz  z D
2
TG 1  *
  Q  Q H  Q E   TG  Tm 
t CG  

Surface forcing term Restoring term

If the surface forcing term is removed, the restoring


term will cause TG to move exponentially towards Tm

To estimate Tm two possibilities:


•Constant (equal to the mean air temperature of the
previous 24hrs)
•Computed assuming that the ground heat flux at the
bottom of the thicker layer is zero.

Tm
 Tg  Tm 
t
Multi-Layer Soil Models (Tremback and
Kessler, 1985)
Q* QH QE

QG ( zi )

Compute the soil temperature in several layers in the soil


solving numerically:

TG   TG 
  
t z  z 

The thermal diffusivity  is computed as a function of


the soil heat capacity and soil moisture potential
The soil moisture potential  is an indirect
measure of water content. It is the energy
necessary to extract water from the soil matrix.
Units are those of a negative pressure (Pa).

The forces which bind soil water are related to the soil
porosity and the soil water content (S, volume of water
per volume of soil). The forces are weakest for open
textured, wet soils and greatest for a clay soil
For a given soil, the potential increases as S
decreases. It is relatively easy to extract moisture
from a wet soil but as it dries out it becomes
increasingly difficult to remove additional units
Vertical flux of liquid water in soil (in absence
of percolating rain) is result of:
• Gravity
•Vertical water potential gradient (flux
gradient relationship as for heat). Darcy’s Law


J  K f
z
K f  hydraulic conductivity

The effect of evapotranspiration is to create a vertical


positive potential gradient which becomes greater
than the opposing gravitational gradient and
encourage the upward movement of water.
Soil heat flux measurements (Oke, 374-5)

In theory QG can be calculated from TG profiles and


knowledge of k or  – in practice this is not really possible,
since the values of k and  are variable and very difficult to
measure.

Most use soil heat flux plats (similar idea to net


radiometer thermopile)

Plates should be inserted in un-disturbed soil (few cm


depth), and not right at the surface. The depth depends on
the nature of the soil and the presence of roots.

Need to consider energy budget between plate and surface


z

Plate

DT

1
QG ( 0 )  QG ( z )
Dt C S Dz
 DT 
QG ( 0 )  QG ( z )   C S Dz
 Dt 

measured measured

Soil heat capacity estimated from


volume fraction of mineral, organic
matters and water
CS =Cm qm + Co qo + Cw qw + Ca qa

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