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T. Yamaguchi

Researcher at Hiroshima University

Publications -  44
Citations -  1874

T. Yamaguchi is an academic researcher from Hiroshima University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soil water & Loam. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1772 citations.

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Predicting the Gas Diffusion Coefficient in Repacked Soil Water-Induced Linear Reduction Model

TL;DR: In this paper, a water-induced linear reduction (WLR) term, equal to the ratio of air-filled porosity to total porosity, was added to the D p (e) model.
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Predicting the Gas Diffusion Coefficient in Undisturbed Soil from Soil Water Characteristics

Abstract: The gas diffusion coefficient in soil (D P ), and its dependency on soil physical characteristics, governs the diffusive transport of oxygen, greenhouse gases, fumigants, and volatile organic pollutants in agricultural, forest, and urban soils. Accurate models for predicting Dp as a function of air-filled porosity (e) in natural, undisturbed soil are needed for realistic gas transport and fate simulations. Using data from 126 undisturbed soil layers, we obtained a high correlation (r 2 = 0.97) for a simple, nonlinear expression describing D P at -100 cm H 2 O of soil water potential (D P,100 ) as a function of the corresponding air-filled porosity (e 100 ), equal to the volume of soil pores with an equivalent pore diameter >30 μm. A new D P (e) model was developed by combining the D P,100 (e 100 ) expression with the Burdine relative hydraulic conductivity model, the latter modified to predict relative gas diffusivity in unsaturated soil. The D P,100 and Burdine terms in the D P (e) model are both related to the soil water characteristic (SWC) curve and, thus, the actual pore-size distribution within the water content range considered. The D P (e) model requires knowledge of the soil's air-filled and total porosities and a minimum of two points on the SWC curve, including a measurement at -100 cm H 2 O. When tested against independent gas diffusivity data for 21 differently textured and undisturbed soils, the SWC-dependent D P (e) model accurately predicted measured data and gave a reduction in root mean square error of prediction between 58 and 83% compared to the classical, soil type-independent Penman and Millington-Quirk models. To further test the new D P (e) model, gas diffusivity and SWC measurements on undisturbed soil cores from three 0.4-m soil horizons (sandy clay loam, sandy loam, and loamy sand) within the 4 to 7 m depth below an industrially polluted soil site were carried out. For these deep subsurface soils the SWC-dependent model best predicted the measured gas diffusivities.
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Glyphosate Sorption in Soils of Different ph and Phosphorus Content

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified the variation in glyphosate sorption and desorption to a coarse sandy soil and to a sandy loam soil with varying phosphorus content and pH.
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Modeling diffusion and reaction in soils. IX. The Buckingham-Burdine-Campbell equation for gas diffusivity in undisturbed soil

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple but soil-type-dependent power function D s /D 0 (e) model was proposed to describe and predict gas diffusivity in undisturbed soil.
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Modeling Diffusion and Reaction in Soils: VII. Predicting Gas and Ion Diffusivity in Undisturbed and Sieved Soils

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed the Penman-Millington-Quirk (PMQ) model to predict gas and ion diffusivity in undisturbed and sieved soils, respectively.