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Hydrologic Losses Infiltration, Evaporation and Transpiration. Hydrology and Water Resources RSGIS Institute of Space Technology October 11 & 23, 2013. Infiltration, Percolation, Seepage. Infiltration Water moving into soil by crossing the soil surface Percolation
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Hydrologic LossesInfiltration, Evaporation and Transpiration Hydrology and Water Resources RSGIS Institute of Space Technology October 11 & 23, 2013
Infiltration, Percolation, Seepage • Infiltration • Water moving into soil by crossing the soil surface • Percolation • Water moving through soil (movement within the soil profile) • Seepage • Water moving out of soil
Infiltration • Infiltration depends on • Soil type • Soil moisture condition • Vegetation providing channelization through roots • Others???
Estimation of Infiltration • Infiltration Capacity • The maximum rate at which water may infiltrate into a ground is called the infiltration capacity • Differs soil to soil • also different for the same soil in its moist and dry states
Measurement of Infiltration • Ring Infiltrometer • Double Ring Infiltrometer • Sprinkler Infiltrometer
Ring Infiltrometer • Constant water level (head) in the ring is maintained by adding water to compensate the infiltration losses • Infiltration losses can be measured by keeping track of added water during time interval • Problem of water leaving out of edges (use of double ring infiltrometer)
Double Ring Infiltrometer • Water tables in both rings are maintained • Only track the water added in the inner ring • More representative of actual vertical infiltration rates
Sprinkler Infiltrometer • Relating as much as possible to the actual basin conditions
Superimposition of Rainfall Hyetograph and Infiltration Curve
Infiltration Indices • The average infiltration rate is called the Infiltration Index • 2 types of indices • φ – index • W – index
φ – index • Rate of infiltration above which the rainfall volume equals runoff volume • Depends on soil type, vegetative cover, initial moisture conditions, storm duration, rainfall intensity, and time of the year • If rainfall intensity is less than φthen the infiltration rate is equal to the rainfall intensity • The amount of rainfall in excess of the index is called rainfall excess or effective rainfall
Example 3 volume
Conti…. • Assume a value of phi index and calculate runoff from graph. If runoff from graph is equal to calculated runoff then phi value is correct. Otherwise assume another value of phi index and redo calculation till runoff from graph equals runoff calculated.
W – index • Average infiltration rate during the time when the rainfall intensity exceeds the infiltration rate W = Total Infiltration/ time during which the rainfall intensity exceeds the infiltration rate Total infiltration = Total precipitation – Surface runoff – Initial losses • Total infiltration is expressed as depth of water
Approximate Equations: Calculating Infiltration • Green-Ampt Model • SCS Method • Horton's Model • others
Green-Ampt Method (1911) • Based on Darcy’s law and unsteady continuity equation • Then integrating the differential equations F(t) = Ks t + ∆θ S ln [ 1 + F (t) / ∆θS ] f (t) = Ks (1 + S∆ θ / F) F (t) = cumulative infiltration at time t t (t) = rate of infiltration at time t Moisture deficit = ∆θ = θs- θi θi= initial water content θs= saturated water content Ks=Saturated hydraulic conductivity S = capillary suction
Limitations • Green-Ampt model applies only when rainfall intensity > infiltration capacity • For unsteady rainfall, G-A model applies as long as the rainfall variation is not large • others
Horton's Model (1940) • Considering exponential behavior of infiltration • Following equation developed for finding rate curve of infiltration capacity f(t) at any time t f(t) = fc+ (f0 + fc)e-kt • f0 = infiltration rate just at the beginning of rainfall (mm/hr) • fc = steady state infiltration capacity (mm/hr) • k =Horton’s infiltration constant dependent on vegetal cover and type of soil (hr-1)
Evapotranspiration • Evaporation: • Change of liquid to vapor from soil or water surface • Transpiration: • Change of liquid to vapor from plant • Evapotranspiration= Evaporation + Transpiration
Evaporation • Depends on: • Solar radiation • Temperature of water and air • Difference in vapor pressure between water and the overlying air • Wind speed • others
Estimating Evaporation • Water Budget (mass balance) • Diffusion (mass transfer) • Energy Budget • Field Measurement (Pan Evaporation)
Water Budget Method Σ inflows – Σ outflows= Δ Storage • Measure inflows • Determine all outflows other than Evaporation and change in storage • Calculate Evaporation E = – ΔS + I + P – O – GW • Where: • ΔS = change in storage O = surface Outflow • I = surface Inflow P = Precipitation • GW= subsurface seepage to groundwater
Open Pan Evaporation • Simple and inexpensive • Cylindrical vessel of 1.2 to 1.8 m dia, 0.3 m high with open top made of galvanized iron • Depth of evaporation during any time interval is measured as the drop in water level in the pan (corrected for precipitation) • Water level is maintained in the pan • Observation taken on daily basis • Pan reading may be different from actual reading because of the differences in temperatures and vapor pressures between pan water and lake water • Actual evaporation = pan coefficient x pan evaporation
Factors Affecting Transpiration • Plant Factor • Efficiency of root system to absorb moisture • Leaf area and structure • Soil Factor • Amount of moisture in soil • Climate Factor • Solar radiation • Atmospheric pressure, temperature and wind • Etc.
Evapotranspiration (ET) • ET rates depends on • Humidity (ET increases with decrease in Humidity) • Temperatures • Sunshine • Wind • Moisture available • Vegetation type and coverage
Potential Evapotranpiration (PET) • For given atmospheric conditions, it is the maximum ET rate possible • The real evapotranspiration occurring in a specific situation is called Actual Evapotranspiration (AET) • AET < PET
Field Capacity: maximum quantity of water that soil can retain against the force of gravity • Permanent Wilting Point: moisture content of soil at which the moisture is no longer available in sufficient quantity to sustain the plants • Both depends on soil characteristics • The difference between these two moisture contents is called ‘available water’- the moisture available for plant growth
Measurement of Evapotranspiration (Field Methods) • Water Budget Method • Soil Moisture Depletion studies • Lysimeters • Field Plots • Using remotely sensed data from satellites to evaluate ET over vast areas (SEBAL Model – Energy Balance)
Soil Moisture Depletion Studies • Soil moisture depletion studies are made • Large number of samples are taken from various depths in the roots zone through out the growth period of a crop M1iand M2i are soil moisture % in the ith layer at the time of 1st and 2nd sampling respectively Gi= apparent specific gravity of ith layer of the soil Di = depth of ith layer of the soil (mm) within the root zone n = number of soil layers considered in the entire root zone
Lysimeters • Special watertight tank containing block of soil • Set into the field of growing plants • Plants growing inside the Lysimeter are same as growing in the surrounding • Evapotranspiration is estimated in term of amount of water required to maintain constant moisture conditions in the tank
Field Plots • In special plots, all elements of water budget are measured and Evapotranspiration is calculated ET = [Precipitation+ Irrigation Input – runoff –increase in soil storage groundwater loss]
Evapotranspiration Equations • Penman’s Equation • Based on energy balance and mass transfer approach