Abstract

Snow cover is the most common upper boundary condition influencing the soil freeze-thaw process in the black soil farming area of northern China. Snow is a porous dielectric cover, and its unique physical properties affect the soil moisture diffusion, heat conduction, freezing rate and other variables. To understand the spatial distribution of the soil water-heat and the variable characteristics of the critical depth of the soil water and heat, we used field data to analyze the freezing rate of soil and the extent of variation in soil water-heat in a unit soil layer under bare land (BL), natural snow (NS), compacted snow (CS) and thick snow (TS) treatments. The critical depth of the soil water and heat activity under different snow covers were determined based on the results of the analysis, and the variation fitting curve of the difference sequences on the soil temperature and water content between different soil layers and the surface 5-cm soil layer were used to verify the critical depth. The results were as follows: snow cover slowed the rate of soil freezing, and the soil freezing rate under the NS, CS and TS treatments decreased by 0.099 cm/day, 0.147 cm/day and 0.307 cm/day, respectively, compared with that under BL. In addition, the soil thawing time was delayed, and the effect was more significant with increased snow cover. During freeze-thaw cycles, the extent of variation in the water and heat time series in the shallow soil was relatively large, while there was less variation in the deep layer. There was a critical stratum in the vertical surface during hydrothermal migration, wherein the critical depth of soil water and heat change gradually increased with increasing snow cover. The variance in differences between the surface layer and both the soil water and heat in the different layers exhibited “steady-rising-steady” behavior, and the inflection point of the curve is the critical depth of soil freezing and thawing. This critical layer is a demarcation point between frozen soil and non-frozen soil, delineating the boundary between soil water and heat migration and non-migration. Furthermore, with increasing snow cover thickness and increasing density, the critical depth gradually increased.

Highlights

  • Soil is a multiphase system composed of solids, liquids and gas

  • The freezing and thawing layer in the soil includes the lower boundary of the cold-influenced environment, and its variation changes the spatial distribution of soil water and heat, Water 2017, 9, 370; doi:10.3390/w9060370

  • The results indicated that the changes in soil water content, soil temperature and freezing depth were dependent on the ambient air temperature and the snow cover conditions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Soil is a multiphase system composed of solids, liquids and gas. Material, energy and information are exchanged between the soil and the environment during the atmospheric cycles in a seasonally frozen soil region [1]. The freezing and thawing layer in the soil includes the lower boundary of the cold-influenced environment, and its variation changes the spatial distribution of soil water and heat, Water 2017, 9, 370; doi:10.3390/w9060370 www.mdpi.com/journal/water. Changes in the active layer thickness in permafrost regions and in the soil water-heat transfer affect hydrological and terrestrial ecosystems [11] and physical and geochemical processes [12,13]. These changes affect crop survival [14] and influence the scientific implementation of agricultural irrigation

Objectives
Methods
Results
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.