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  • Publication
    Accès libre
    Potential evaporation dynamics over saturated bare soil and an open waters surface
    (2020-7)
    Li, Wanxin
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    Hendricks Franssen, Harrie-Jan
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    Li, Zhi
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    Wang, Zhoufeng
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    Zhang, Zhengyu
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    Wang, Wenke
    Actual evaporation (Ea) can be calculated as a fraction of potential evaporation (PE), which refers to the evaporation rate if supply water is unlimited. Potential evaporation depends on the available energy and the underlying material, and different approaches to estimate potential evaporation exist nowadays. This study provides a detailed analysis of the evaporation dynamics over fully saturated, sandy soil (PEs) and an open water surface (PEw). Moreover, the performance of commonly used methods to estimate PE is assessed. At the basis of these analyses is a lysimeter experiment in the Guanzhong Basin, China, which allowed a precise measurement of PE with a very high temporal resolution. Temperature profiles in lysimeters and meteorological data were also measured during the experiment. A comparison of PEs and PEw was carried out for seven consecutive days (August 11th to 17th, 2016). Results show that PEw is smaller than PEs on a daily scale, with PEw rates being bigger than PEs at night but smaller during daytime. Furthermore, the temporal dynamics of PEw lags 4–5 h behind PEs. In accordance with the energy balance equation, PE dynamics are mainly governed by “available energy”. The PE rates calculated by Penman-Monteith (PM) and Priestly-Taylor (PT) based on these measurements were also evaluated. The measured PE is relatively well reproduced by PM and PT equations. Finally, the effect of using different approaches to estimate PE on calculating Ea was tested by an integrated hydrological model that calculates water flow in the unsaturated zone by solving the Richards equation. The relative differences were up to 17.5%.
  • Publication
    Accès libre
    Assessing bare-soil evaporation from different water-table depths using lysimeters and a numerical model in the Ordos Basin, China
    (2019-7)
    Ma, Zhitong
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    Wang, Wenke
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    Zhang, Zaiyong
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    Wang, Zhoufeng
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    Chen, Li
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    Zhao, Ming
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    Gong, Chengcheng
    In semiarid and arid regions, the evaporation from bare soil is highly sensitive to changes in the depth to the water table. This study quantifies the relation between water-table depth and the groundwater contribution to evaporation in the Ordos Basin in China. In-situ field experiments were combined with numerical simulations of heat, vapor and liquid water flow. Based on lysimeter experiments and a calibrated numerical model, a relation between depth to groundwater and evaporation rate was established for the lysimeter site. In addition, a sensitivity analysis considering the hydraulic conductivity and the inverse of the air-entry pressure (vanGenuchten α) was established. For the field site, the results showed that for the water-table depths less than 52 cm below the ground, evaporation is independent of the water-table depth. For water-table depths exceeding 52 cm, an exponential relation between depth to groundwater and evaporation is observed. No phreatic evaporation occurs for water tables deeper than 105 cm, which is nearly two times the capillary fringe height. The sensitivity analysis showed that the extinction depth decreased with decreasing hydraulic conductivity and increased with α. The field-specific results and the sensitivity analysis provide valuable information to understand the dynamic processes of soil evaporation in the Ordos Basin. From a methodological point of view, the proposed modelling approach and the integration of lysimeter data proved to be a highly efficient combination to study evaporation dynamics in semi-arid and arid environments.