Journal article

Three-dimensional distribution of water and air in soil pores: Comparison of two-phase two-relaxation-times lattice-Boltzmann and morphological model outputs with synchrotron X-ray computed tomography data



Publication Details
Authors:
Potapov, A.; Peth, S.; Monga, O.; Vogel, L.; Genty, A.; Garnier, P.; Vieuble-Gonod, L.; Ogurreck, M.; Beckmann, F.; Baveye, P.
Publisher:
ELSEVIER SCI LTD

Publication year:
2015
Journal:
Advances in Water Resources
Pages range :
87-102
Volume number:
84
Start page:
87
End page:
102
Number of pages:
16
ISSN:
0309-1708
eISSN:
1872-9657
DOI-Link der Erstveröffentlichung:


Abstract
Recent progress in the understanding of soil microbial processes at micrometric scales has created a need for models that accurately predict the microscale distribution of water, and the location of air water interfaces in pores. Various models have been developed and used for these purposes, but how well they fare against real data has yet largely to be determined. In this context, for the first time, this article compares the prediction of two of these models to experimental data obtained on soil material. The distribution of water and air in soil samples constituted of repacked aggregates, equilibrated at three matric potentials (-0.5 kPa, -1 kPa and -2 kPa), was measured via synchrotron X-ray computed tomography at a resolution of 4.6 pm. Water distribution was simulated by a two-phase lattice Boltzmann model (LBM) and a morphological model (MOSAIC). Results indicate that, when one lifts the assumption, motivated by capillary theory, that a pore can drain only if a connecting pore is already full of air, MOSAIC gives an acceptable approximation of the observed air water interfaces. However, discretization of pores as geometrical primitives causes interfaces predicted by MOSAIC to have nonphysical shapes. By contrast, LBM is able to predict remarkably well the location of air water interfaces. Nevertheless, given the huge difference in computing time (minutes versus tens of hours) required to run these two models, it is recommended that further research be carried out on the development of both, in parallel. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Keywords
Lattice Boltzmann model, Morphological model, Pore-scale, Soil air-water interfaces, Synchrotron X-ray micro CT


Authors/Editors

Last updated on 2025-08-01 at 10:32