Abstract

AbstractBackgroundGas exchange between soil and atmosphere is of great importance for greenhouse gas cycles. As gas transport in soil is generally dominated by diffusion, the soil gas diffusion coefficient (DS) is crucial to understand fluxes between soil and atmosphere. Estimating DS is still a great source of uncertainty when calculating soil gas fluxes such as soil respiration from soil gas profiles. In situ measurement of the effective exchange coefficient (Deff) not only reduces this uncertainty, but also allows to quantify non‐diffusive transport processes in addition to the purely diffusive exchange (DS), which cannot be investigated by laboratory measurements or the application of soil gas diffusivity models. Even though several methods for in situ Deff measurement exist, they often lack in the temporal resolution to identify short‐term effects on Deff or require laborious set‐ups, which makes them unsuitable for a fast and mobile application.AimsOur objective was to test an improved profile probe for model‐based soil gas flux analyses that allows in situ monitoring of (1) soil CO2 profiles with high temporal resolution, (2) soil gas transport coefficients, including non‐diffusive transport processes, (3) soil–atmosphere CO2 flux, and (4) soil respiration profiles.MethodsWe developed a CO2 profile probe with build‐in sensors that can easily be installed in soil to gain continuous CO2 concentration profiles. The probe includes the option to inject CO2 as a tracer gas to estimate Deff. To account for changes in natural CO2 concentrations in the soil, we tested two approaches: firstly, a differential approach using two probes, an injection probe and a reference probe, and secondly, a stand‐alone approach in which changes in natural CO2 concentrations are estimated by a statistical model using its main environmental drivers. The resulting tracer gas profiles were used to fit a finite element gas diffusion model to derive Deff. Using the derived Deff values and the CO2 profiles allowed calculating CO2 fluxes. The approach was tested with controlled laboratory experiments using different mineral substrates to compare the diffusivity estimates of the in situ method with laboratory measurements on soil cores. Additional laboratory experiments included artificial CO2 sources to simulate soil respiration in order to evaluate the gradient‐based estimation of soil respiration profiles. In a second step, both approaches were tested under natural conditions in the field.ResultsThe derived Deff values agreed well with laboratory measurements of DS and DS‐transfer functions. The artificial CO2 sources could accurately be estimated with the gradient method. In the field under calm conditions, both approaches for the estimation of the changing natural CO2 profile gave comparable results. Under windy conditions, the stand‐alone approach gave unrealistically high values, whereas the differential approach using a reference profile still gave reliable results. We observed a clear relationship between Deff and wind‐induced pressure pumping in the topsoil. The estimated surface CO2 efflux agreed well with chamber measurements.ConclusionsThis new set‐up enables monitoring of diffusive and non‐diffusive soil gas exchange and soil respiration in situ with high resolution and relatively low effort.

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