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Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements

Dielectric measurement techniques are used widely for estimation of water content in environmental media. However, factors such as temperature and salinity affecting the readings require further quantitative investigation and explanation. Theoretical sensitivities of capacitance sensors to liquid sa...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schwank, Mike, Green, Timothy R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3800364/
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author Schwank, Mike
Green, Timothy R.
author_facet Schwank, Mike
Green, Timothy R.
author_sort Schwank, Mike
collection PubMed
description Dielectric measurement techniques are used widely for estimation of water content in environmental media. However, factors such as temperature and salinity affecting the readings require further quantitative investigation and explanation. Theoretical sensitivities of capacitance sensors to liquid salinity and temperature of porous media were derived and computed using a revised electrical circuit analogue model in conjunction with a dielectric mixing model and a finite element model of Maxwell's equation to compute electrical field distributions. The mixing model estimates the bulk effective complex permittivities of solid-water-air media. The real part of the permittivity values were used in electric field simulations, from which different components of capacitance were calculated via numerical integration for input to the electrical circuit analogue. Circuit resistances representing the dielectric losses were calculated from the complex permittivity of the bulk soil and from the modeled fields. Resonant frequencies from the circuit analogue were used to update frequency-dependent variables in an iterative manner. Simulated resonant frequencies of the capacitance sensor display sensitivities to both temperature and salinity. The gradients in normalized frequency with temperature ranged from negative to positive values as salinity increased from 0 to 10 g L(-1). The model development and analyses improved our understanding of processes affecting the temperature and salinity sensitivities of capacitance sensors in general. This study provides a foundation for further work on inference of soil water content under field conditions.
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spelling pubmed-38003642013-10-22 Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements Schwank, Mike Green, Timothy R. Sensors (Basel) Full Research Paper Dielectric measurement techniques are used widely for estimation of water content in environmental media. However, factors such as temperature and salinity affecting the readings require further quantitative investigation and explanation. Theoretical sensitivities of capacitance sensors to liquid salinity and temperature of porous media were derived and computed using a revised electrical circuit analogue model in conjunction with a dielectric mixing model and a finite element model of Maxwell's equation to compute electrical field distributions. The mixing model estimates the bulk effective complex permittivities of solid-water-air media. The real part of the permittivity values were used in electric field simulations, from which different components of capacitance were calculated via numerical integration for input to the electrical circuit analogue. Circuit resistances representing the dielectric losses were calculated from the complex permittivity of the bulk soil and from the modeled fields. Resonant frequencies from the circuit analogue were used to update frequency-dependent variables in an iterative manner. Simulated resonant frequencies of the capacitance sensor display sensitivities to both temperature and salinity. The gradients in normalized frequency with temperature ranged from negative to positive values as salinity increased from 0 to 10 g L(-1). The model development and analyses improved our understanding of processes affecting the temperature and salinity sensitivities of capacitance sensors in general. This study provides a foundation for further work on inference of soil water content under field conditions. Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2007-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3800364/ Text en © 2007 by MDPI (http://www.mdpi.org). Reproduction is permitted for noncommercial purposes.
spellingShingle Full Research Paper
Schwank, Mike
Green, Timothy R.
Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements
title Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements
title_full Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements
title_fullStr Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements
title_full_unstemmed Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements
title_short Simulated Effects of Soil Temperature and Salinity on Capacitance Sensor Measurements
title_sort simulated effects of soil temperature and salinity on capacitance sensor measurements
topic Full Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3800364/
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