4.6 Article

How Heterogeneous Pore Scale Distributions of Wettability Affect Infiltration into Porous Media

Journal

WATER
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w14071110

Keywords

porous media; rhizosphere; heterogeneous wettability; effective contact angle; lattice boltzmann modeling

Funding

  1. MUCI-WETT-PATT Project [403668613]
  2. German Research Foundation DFG [403640522]
  3. German Research Foundation under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC-2070-390732324-PhenoRob]
  4. DFG [403660839]

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Wettability is an important parameter for determining hydrology in porous media, but the influence of spatially heterogeneous wettability distributions is not well understood. This study used numerical simulations to investigate the impact of spatially heterogeneous wettability patterns on infiltration in porous media. The results show that the specific location of wettability patterns within the pore space determines hydraulic dynamics and water repellency.
Wettability is an important parameter that significantly determines hydrology in porous media, and it especially controls the flow of water across the rhizosphere-the soil-plant interface. However, the influence of spatially heterogeneous distributions on the soil particles surfaces is scarcely known. Therefore, this study investigates the influence of spatially heterogeneous wettability distributions on infiltration into porous media. For this purpose, we utilize a two-phase flow model based on Lattice-Boltzmann to numerically simulate the infiltration in porous media with a simplified geometry and for various selected heterogeneous wettability coatings. Additionally, we simulated the rewetting of the dry rhizosphere of a sandy soil where dry hydrophobic mucilage depositions on the particle surface are represented via a locally increased contact angle. In particular, we can show that hydraulic dynamics and water repellency are determined by the specific location of wettability patterns within the pore space. When present at certain locations, tiny hydrophobic depositions can cause water repellency in an otherwise well-wettable soil. In this case, averaged, effective contact angle parameterizations such as the Cassie equation are unsuitable. At critical conditions, when the rhizosphere limits root water uptake, consideration of the specific microscale locations of exudate depositions may improve models of root water uptake.

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