Title: Water Content
1Water Content Water Potential
2Water
Soil
Potential
3Water Content vs Water Potential
- Water content
- amount of water in soil
- calculated by mass or volume (g/g or cm3/ cm3)
- produces a percent content
- tells you how much water is present
- Water Potential
- energy of water in soil
- measured in energy/mass soil
- units are J/kg or kPa (these are equivalent)
- tells you which direction water will move and how
easy or difficult it will be for it to do so
4Gravimetric (Mass) Water Content (W)
- units g/g or kg/kg
- W (mass water / mass dry soil) x 100
- Example 40 g water in 75 g soil
- (40g / 75g) x 100 53
- To get weight values
- weigh soil sample
- place in 105C oven for 24 hours
- reweigh sample to get dry soil mass
- subtract dry weight from wet weight to water mass
5Volumetric Water Content (?)
- units cm3/cm3 or m3/m3
- ? (volume water / volume soil) x 100
- Example 0.3 m3 water in 1 m3 soil
- ? (0.3 m3 / 1 m3) x 100 30 water
- can also solve if know bulk density and
gravimetric water content - BD mass dry soil/unit bulk volume
- ? (BD x W) x 100
- Example BD 1.4 g/cm3 and W 20
- ? (1.4 x 0.2) x 100 28
6Water Potential (?)
- measures the energy of water
- units J/kg or kPa (these are equivalent)
- () water potential tells you how much energy
will be released when the water moves - e.g. water coming down over a falls or rapids
- (-) water potential tells you how much energy
will have to be exerted to move the water - e.g. water down in soil being taken up by plant
roots - (0) water potential is free water
- e.g. water in a pool
- serves as your reference level
- water always flows from high to low potential
7Water Potential (?)
- ?Total ?g ?m ?p ?o
- ?g gravitational potential
- only matters in soil science once a soil is
saturated - ?m matric potential
- THE water potential of soil science
- ?p pressure potential
- negligible in soil science
- ?o osmotic potential (also called solute
potential, ?s) - only matters in soil science when the soil is
salty
8Matric Potential (?m)
- for our purposes, ?T ?m
- generated from the attraction of polar water
molecules to negatively charged colloid surfaces
(adhesion) and each other (cohesion) - also referred to as suction or tension
- ?m always has a negative value
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10Negative ?
- free water has a water potential of zero
- in soil, ? is always negative (unless the soil is
saturated, then ? 1) - this means it requires energy for a plant to take
up water - the more negative the ? value, the more suction
it has to the colloids, the harder it is for a
plant to take it up - dont forget
- a low ? is a very big negative number (e.g -2000)
- a high ? is a very small negative number (e.g.
-10)
11Plant Available Water
- once saturated, gravity (?g) will drain a soils
total ? from 1 to between -10 and -30 kPa (field
capacity) - plant available water is between -10 and -1500
kPa - -1500 kPa is the permanent wilting point
- below this point, most plants can no longer draw
up water - if more water is not added to the soil soon, the
plant will permanently wilt and die - In irrigation systems especially, being able to
measure water potential could be helpful!
12Tools for Measuring ?
Tensiometer - measures suction of soil on water
13Tools for Measuring ?
Thermocouple Sample Chamber Psychrometers -
measure air humidity in equilibrium with sample
and infers ? with math equation
14Water Content and Water Potential
- both important, but ? more so
- ? will determine whether or not a plant is
capable of taking up water, regardless of the
water content - i.e. it doesnt matter what the water content of
a soil is if the water potential is too low for a
plant to be able to take up water - different soil textures will reach the same ? at
different water contents
15Texture, Water Content and Water Potential
Why?
Higher surface area and negative charge of clays
means more water is held onto tightera little
clay goes a long way!