2003
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.1358
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The effects of soil bulk density, clay content and temperature on soil water content measurement using time‐domain reflectometry

Abstract: Time-domain reflectometry (TDR) is increasingly used for field soil water estimation because the measurement is nondestructive and less affected by soil texture, bulk density and temperature. However, with the increase in instrument resolution, the influences of soil bulk density and temperature on TDR soil moisture measurements have been reported. The influence is primarily caused by changes in soil and water dielectric permittivity when soil compaction and temperature varies. The objective of this study is t… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(65 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
(35 reference statements)
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“…Many researchers (e.g., Gong et al, 2003;Malicki et al, 1996;De Loor, 1968;Karkkainen et al, 2000;Or and Wraith, 1999) have been continuing to model the soil as a mixture of solid particles, water and air to take into account their contribution to e. In some studies, the water is divided into free water and bound water which is near to the surface of solid particles to consider the difference between their dielectrical behaviors (e.g., Or and Wraith, 1999). Gong et al (2003) reported that, as soil texture becomes finer (surface area per unit mass becomes larger) the effect of bound water becomes significant and therefore Topp's calibration equation (Topp et al, 1980) needs to be adjusted. Accordingly the temperature effect on all four phases (solid, gas, free water, bound water) of the soil column needs to be assessed for the total evaluation of the temperature effect.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Many researchers (e.g., Gong et al, 2003;Malicki et al, 1996;De Loor, 1968;Karkkainen et al, 2000;Or and Wraith, 1999) have been continuing to model the soil as a mixture of solid particles, water and air to take into account their contribution to e. In some studies, the water is divided into free water and bound water which is near to the surface of solid particles to consider the difference between their dielectrical behaviors (e.g., Or and Wraith, 1999). Gong et al (2003) reported that, as soil texture becomes finer (surface area per unit mass becomes larger) the effect of bound water becomes significant and therefore Topp's calibration equation (Topp et al, 1980) needs to be adjusted. Accordingly the temperature effect on all four phases (solid, gas, free water, bound water) of the soil column needs to be assessed for the total evaluation of the temperature effect.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further they have proposed a method to correct e in order to compute the temperature-corrected soil moisture. Gong et al (2003) used direct TDR-measured soil water content to add the temperature correction. Skierucha (2009) also suggested two temperature corrections depending on the value of equilibrium water content and TDR-measured soil moisture.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jacobsen and Schjønning (1993) demonstrated that at higher bulk densities dielectric constant values increased when compared with lower bulk densities. Similarly, Gong et al (2003) and Zheng et al (2011) reported an increase of the VWC with increasing soil bulk density.…”
Section: The Acclima Digital Tdt Sensormentioning
confidence: 75%
“…They concluded that soils high in clay content exhibited greater data variation than sandy soils. Topp et al (2000), Gong et al (2003), and Bittelli et al (2008) also indicated an overestimation of the TDR VWC measurements in saline clayey soils.…”
Section: The Acclima Digital Tdt Sensormentioning
confidence: 93%
“…( [7]) All sensors were checked and calibrated in laboratory before installation work. Calibration of TDR probes included the effects of temperature, soil type and soil unit mass upon the measured values ( [16,18,19,20,21,22,23]). The influence of temperature upon the measurement with strain gauges was also checked in laboratory and included into calibration.…”
Section: Figure 2 Grain Size Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%