Abstract

In this study, we analysed low-frequency drone-borne ground-penetrating radar (GPR) and full-wave inversion for soil electrical conductivity mapping. Indeed, in the lowest GPR frequency ranges, the soil surface reflexion coefficient depends more on the soil electrical conductivity than on its permittivity. Numerical experiments were conducted within the frequency range 15-45 MHz to analyse parameter sensitivities, the well-posedness of the inverse problem as well as the depth of sensitivity. The results show that the soil surface reflexion is significantly more sensitive to the soil electrical conductivity than the soil permittivity. Therefore, the conductivity can be retrieved using full-wave inversion within this frequency range, with a characterization depth varying from 0.5 to 1 m, depending on the soil properties. Yet, the permittivity also affects the results and should be accounted for in the inversion strategy. Field measurements were performed using low-frequency drone-borne radar with a 5-metre half-wave dipole antenna, and EMI measurements with different depth sensitivities were conducted for comparison. Kriging interpolation was used to get maps from measurement points. The soil conductivity maps obtained by the proposed GPR and EMI are compliant in terms of absolute values and spatial patterns. This study demonstrated the capacity of low-frequency drone-borne GPR for fast, field-scale soil electrical conductivity mapping.

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