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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Revealing pore connectivity across scales and resolutions with X‐ray CT

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TLDR
The scale dependence of connectivity metrics needs to be accounted for in this article, where the authors investigated the changes in pore connectivity with changing sample size, covering a range of analysed pore diameters of more than three orders of magnitude.
Abstract
Connectivity is one of the most important parameters to quantify pore structure and link it to soil functions. One of the great challenges in quantifying connectivity with X‐ray microtomography (X‐ray μCT) is that high resolution, as required for small pores, can only be achieved in small samples in which the connectivity of larger pores can no longer be quantified in a meaningful way. The objective of this study was to investigate the changes in pore connectivity with changing sample size, covering a range of analysed pore diameters of more than three orders of magnitude. With this approach, we wanted to address whether pore types formed by different processes in an agricultural chronosequence leave characteristic traces in certain connectivity metrics. The Euler number, χ, and the connection probability of two random points within the pore system, that is, the Γ‐indicator, were determined as a function of minimum pore diameter. The results show that characteristic signatures of certain pore types overlap with scale artifacts in the connectivity functions. The Γ‐indicator, gives highly biased information in small samples. Therefore, we developed a new method for a joint‐Γ‐curve that merges information from three samples sizes. However, χ does not require such a scale fusion. It can be used to define characteristic size ranges for pore types and is very sensitive to the occurrence of bottle necks. Our findings suggest a joint evaluation of both connectivity metrics to disentangle different pore types with χ and to identify the contribution of different pore types to the overall pore connectivity with Γ. This evaluation on the chronosequence showed that biopores mainly connect pores of diameters between 0.5 and 0.1 mm. This was not coupled with an increase in pore volume. In contrast, tillage led to a shift of pores of diameter >0.05 mm towards pores of diameter >0.20 mm and thus increased connectivity of pores >0.20 mm. This work underlines the importance of accounting for the scale dependence of connectivity measures and provides a methodological approach for doing so. HIGHLIGHTS: Scale dependence of connectivity metrics needs to be accounted for. Connectivity metrics can be used to disentangle different pore types across scales. Roots mainly connect the pore system between 0.1 and 0.5 mm. A joint Γ‐connectivity function can be constructed that is free of scale artifacts.

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The unexplored role of preferential flow in soil carbon dynamics

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Root growth and presence of Rhizophagus irregularis distinctly alter substrate hydraulic properties in a model system with Medicago truncatula

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References
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Book ChapterDOI

Topological Characterization of Porous Media

TL;DR: In this paper, the pore-scale topology of natural soils is quantified by a connectivity function defined by the Euler characteristic as a function of a porosity threshold, which is used to generate the porous structure that allow to predict bulk hydraulic properties of the material.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative Relationships between Soil Macropore Characteristics and Preferential Flow and Transport

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantitatively relate macropore characteristics to saturated hydraulic conductivity (K sat ) and dispersivity (λ) and identify major macropores characteristics useful for estimating soil hydraulic properties under saturated condition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protection of soil carbon within macro-aggregates depends on intra-aggregate pore characteristics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated how micro-environmental conditions, represented by soil pores, influence decomposition of POM and found that atmosphere-connected soil pores influenced soil C's, and especially POM's, decomposition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Connectivity and percolation of structural pore networks in a cultivated silt loam soil quantified by X-ray tomography

TL;DR: In this article, X-ray tomography was used to measure soil pore space architecture at an image resolution of 65μm for 64 samples taken in two consecutive years in the harrowed and ploughed layers of a silt loam soil a few weeks after spring cultivation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plants for amelioration of subsoil constraints and hydrological control: the primer-plant concept

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed the use of suitable plant species, termed primer-plants, for the primary purpose of preparing soil conditions for the benefit of following crops, which may be used in the temperate agricultural belts of southern Australia, where dryland salinity is a major environmental and agricultural problem that threatens the viability of many crop production enterprises.
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