Abstract

Microwave soil heating deactivates weed seeds; however, in many modern agricultural settings, weed seeds are mostly found in the top 1–2 cm of the soil profile. Until recently, microwave soil heating has been achieved using various antennas, which project the microwave energy deeply into the soil. The aim of this research was to develop new microwave applicators that provide shallow heating (less than 50 mm). This paper presents two applicator designs, one based on a comb slow-wave structure and the other on the frustrated total internal reflection (FTIR) principle, which utilise evanescent microwave fields to restrict the depth of microwave heating. The background theory to their performance is presented, followed by experimental evidence of their constrained heating performance under different soil moisture scenarios. Experimental measurements of the heating performance of these applicators, in soils of varying moisture content, demonstrate that the evanescent microwave fields restrict the depth of heating, so that most of the energy is manifested in the top 50 mm of soil. The evanescent field decay rate for the FTIR applicator changes from 44.0 ± 0.7 m−1 to 30 ± 1.2 m−1 as the soil moisture changes from 32% to 174% (dry weight basis). This is higher than the evanescent field decay rate for the comb slow-wave applicator (17.6 ± 0.7 m−1 to 19.9 ± 1.5 m−1). The FTIR applicator has a wider and shallower heating pattern than the comb slow-wave applicator. Because of the double heating lobes of the FTIR applicator, the effective half temperature heating width is approximately 150 mm. This is wider than the half temperature heating width of the comb slow-wave applicator (95 mm).

Highlights

  • Accepted: 25 January 2022Microwave heating of soil has been shown to deactivate weed seeds [1]

  • It is interesting that the evanescent field attenuation associated with the frustrated total internal reflection (FTIR) applicator decreases as the soil moisture increases, which is opposite to the comb slow‐wave’s be‐

  • Rently undergoing extensive dynamic field trials and will be reported on in a future paper. Both microwave applicators restrict most of the microwave heating to a depth of 50 mm, as they were designed to do

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Summary

Introduction

Accepted: 25 January 2022Microwave heating of soil has been shown to deactivate weed seeds [1]. [2] were among the first to consider the phytotoxicity of electromagnetic waves on weeds and their seeds. Et al [8] showed that the effects of microwave radiation on weeds and their seeds depend upon the power density of the radiation and the dielectric properties of the targets. Factors such as the size of seeds and plants, shape and moisture content are important, as are the properties of the soil [8]

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