Abstract
The influence of the soil on the growth of a root system has been largely investigated. By contrast, the aim of this work is to go deep into the details of how the soil may be influenced by the root system. In particular, the root growth process and its potential to improve the soil strength is explored. Even though roots can be seen as fiber-like reinforcements, their growth changes the soil microstructure. Consequently, one of the objectives is to understand how the water content and the soil displacement fields evolve when an inclusion expands radially and axially. In particular, an investigation was carried on to characterise the deformation of the solid phase of the soil, due to the root growth. A series of in-vivo x-ray tomographies was acquired with Maize seeds growing roots into a coarse Hostun HN1.5-2 sand. Digital Image Correlation is used to calculate the soil 3D displacement fields around the growing plant roots.
Highlights
Plants represent 99 % of the Earth biomass
We focus here on the discrete displacement fields representing the translation and the rotation of the centre of mass of each sand grain
The investigation focuses on the sand grains in direct contact with the roots which are the most prone, a priori, to move during root growth
Summary
Plants represent 99 % of the Earth biomass. Root-soil interactions greatly influence soil formation and erosion, together with soil mechanical and hydraulic properties. Effects of soil properties on root growth have been widely studied. A method for quantifying root-macropore associations from horizontal soil sections is illustrated in [1], where it was shown that root growth in arable soils is often limited by soil strength [2], [3], or by the availability of macropores that provide low-resistance pathways for root growth in very strong soils [4]. The effect of root hairs has been studied. They have a key role in anchoring the root tip during soil penetration [5]
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