Abstract

Soil steam disinfection (SSD) technology is one of the effective means to eliminate soil-borne diseases, especially under the condition of clay-loam soil cultivation for facility agriculture in Yangtze River delta (China). With the fine particles, small pores and high density of the soil, the way of steam transport and heat transfer are quite different from those of other cultivation mediums, and when using SSD injection method, the diffusion of steam between pipes will be affected, inhibiting the heat transfer in the dense soil. Therefore, it is necessary to explore the influence of steam pipe spacing (SPS) on the energy consumption and soil temperature (ST) for clay-loam disinfection. The best results are to find a suitable SPS that satisfies the inter-tube steam that can be gathered together evenly without being lost to the air under limited boiler heating capacity. To this purpose, we first used a computational fluid dynamics model to calculate the effective SPS to inject steam into deep soil. Second, the ST, ST rise rate, ST coefficient of variation, and soil water content variation among different treatments (12, 18, 24, or 30 cm pipe spacing) were analysed. Finally, the heating efficiency of all treatments depending on the disinfection time ratio and relative energy consumption was evaluated. The result shows that in the clay-loam unique to Southern China, the elliptical shape of the high-temperature region obtained from the numerical simulation was basically consistent with the experiment results, and the ratios of short diameter to long diameter were 0.65 and 0.63, respectively. In the SPS = 12 and 18 cm treatments, the steam completely diffused at a 0–20 cm soil layer depth, and the heat transfer was convective. However, at an SPS = 12 cm, steam accumulation occurred at the steam pipe holes, causing excessive accumulation of steam heat. The relative energy consumptions for SPS = 30, 24, and 12 cm were above 2.18 kJ/(kg·°C), and the disinfection time ratio was below 0.8. Thus, under a two-pipe flow rate = 4–8 kg/h, the inter-tube steam was found to be completely concentrated with a uniform continuous high temperature distribution within the soil for an appropriate SPS = 18–22 cm, avoiding the unnecessary loss of steam heat, and this method can be considered for static and moving disinfection operations in the cultivated layer (−20–0 cm) of clay loam soil. However, for soil with higher clay contents, the SPS can be appropriately reduced to less than 18 cm. For soil with lower clay contents and higher sand contents, the SPS can be increased to more than 22 cm.

Highlights

  • Soil steam disinfection (SSD) technology can efficiently kill fungi, bacteria, and pests under the condition of soil cultivation for facility agriculture [1,2,3,4], which can solve the problem of continuousEnergies 2019, 12, 3209; doi:10.3390/en12173209 www.mdpi.com/journal/energiesEnergies 2019, 12, 3209 cropping in high-value crop cultivation [5,6,7]

  • Keeping this factor in mind, the current study focused on using different values of the steam pipe spacing (SPS) in the clay loam unique to southern China to find a suitable SPS under which the injection method forms a continuous uniform soil disinfection zone and the control steam heat loss is kept to a minimum

  • A computational fluid fluid dynamics dynamics (CFD) numerical calculation is used to determine that when the Yh is 20 cm, the Xh of a single pipe is 13 cm, and the high-soil temperature (ST) area is elliptical

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Summary

Introduction

Soil steam disinfection (SSD) technology can efficiently kill fungi, bacteria, and pests under the condition of soil cultivation for facility agriculture [1,2,3,4], which can solve the problem of continuousEnergies 2019, 12, 3209; doi:10.3390/en12173209 www.mdpi.com/journal/energiesEnergies 2019, 12, 3209 cropping in high-value crop cultivation [5,6,7]. For the disinfection of clay-loam in Yangtze River delta (China), because of its soil clay content and small soil pores which cause poor water permeability [16,17], the SSD injection method under clay-loam conditions will seriously affect the diffusion range of steam in the dense soil [18,19], resulting in poor disinfection efficiency and increased energy consumption. Can greatly increase the soil heating rate under limited energy condition This is because the steam supplied by an injection pipe forces the re-evaporation of steam condensate, which contributes to deplete the soil porosity [6,13], and the sandy-loam soil because its large soil pores promote the steam diffusion in loose soil even though the soil pores are filled with condensate [6,13]. Compared with other loose soils, steam was difficult to diffuse in the clay-loam soil because of its dense structure

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Conclusion

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