31 May 2021 to 4 June 2021
Europe/Berlin timezone

Estimation of unsaturated soil hydraulic properties by integrated hydrogeophysical inversion of time-lapse ground-penetrating radar measurements

2 Jun 2021, 09:30
15m
Oral Presentation (MS25) Subsurface Water Flow and Contaminant Transport Processes – Special Session in Honor of Harry Vereecken MS25

Speaker

Prof. Khan Zaib Jadoon (Department of Civil Engineering, International Islamic University, Islamabad, Pakistan)

Description

Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) has shown a great potential for high resolution and non-invasive mapping to estimate soil hydraulic parameters at the field scale. In traditional GPR methods, soil dielectric permittivity is retrieved by using ray-based travel time or reflection analyses, which is strongly correlated to soil moisture. These methods suffer, however, from two major shortcomings. First, only a part of the information in the GPR signal is considered (e.g., propagation time). Second, the forward model describing the radar data is subject to relatively strong simplifications with respect to electromagnetic wave propagation phenomena. These limitations typically results in errors in the reconstructed water content images and, furthermore, this does not permit to exploit all information contained in the GPR data.

We explored an alternative method by using full-waveform hydrogeophysical inversion of time-lapse off-ground GPR measurements to remotely estimate the unsaturated soil hydraulic properties. The radar system is based on international standard vector network analyzer technology and a full-waveform model is used to describe wave propagation in the antenna-air-soil system, including antenna-soil interactions. A hydrodynamic model is used to constrain the inverse electromagnetic problem in reconstructing continuous vertical water content profiles. In that case the estimated parameters reduce to the soil hydraulic properties, thereby strongly reducing the dimensionality of the inverse problem.

We present an application of the proposed method to a data set collected in lab and field experiments. The GPR model involves a full-waveform frequency-domain solution of Maxwell’s equations for wave propagation in three-dimensional multilayered media. The hydrodynamic model used in this work is based on a one-dimensional solution of Richards equation and the hydrological simulator HYDRUS 1-D was used with a single- and dual-porosity model. To monitor the soil water content dynamics, time-lapse GPR and time domain reflectometry (TDR) measurements were performed, whereby only GPR data was used in the inversion. Significant effects of water dynamics were observed in the time-lapse GPR data and in particular precipitation and evaporation events were clearly visible. The dual porosity model provided better results compared to the single porosity model for describing the soil water dynamics, which is supported by field observations of macropores. Furthermore, the GPR derived water content profiles reconstructed from the integrated hydrogeophysical inversion were in good agreement with TDR observations. These results suggest that the proposed method is promising for non-invasive characterization of the shallow subsurface hydraulic properties and monitoring water dynamics at the field scale.

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Primary authors

Prof. Khan Zaib Jadoon (Department of Civil Engineering, International Islamic University, Islamabad, Pakistan) Dr Lutz Weihermüller (Forschungszentrum Juelich, ICBG-3 Agrosphere, Juelich D-52425, Germany) Prof. Sebastian Lambot (Université catholique de Louvain, Croix du Sud, 2 box L7.05.02, Louvain-la-Neuve B-1348, Belgium) Dr Davood Moghadas (Research Center Landscape Development and Mining Landscapes, Brandenburg University of Technology, D-03046 Cottbus, Germany) Harry Vereecken (Forschungszentrum Juelich, ICBG-3 Agrosphere, Juelich D-52425, Germany)

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