4.7 Article

Continuous-time monitoring of liquid water content in snowpacks using capacitance probes: A preliminary feasibility study

Journal

ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages 32-41

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.advwatres.2014.02.012

Keywords

Snowpack liquid water content; Capacitance sensors; Continuous-time monitoring; TDR

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Liquid water in snowpacks rules wet snow avalanche formation, surface albedo and snowmelt runoff timing. By now, volumetric liquid water content (LWC) measurements are collected mainly with destructive methods, while continuous-time and non-invasive measurements would be preferable to track its time dynamics. Here, we assess the feasibility of continuous-time monitoring of LWC using EnviroSMART (R) capacitance sensors. These were conceived to track liquid water dynamics in soils, and their use in snow is evaluated here for the first time, as far as we know. A field case study was settled up in April 2013 within an Italian Alpine valley. An instrumental set up with eight capacitance sensors was installed. Two time-domain reflectrometers were added to the aim of comparison. To assist in interpreting the signal of the capacitance sensors, two laboratory tests were run, and a FEM model was implemented. This preliminary study demonstrates that capacitance sensors are sensitive to increasing LWC, although their long-term installation in snow entails the development of an air gap around them, due to localized melting, air turbulence and solar radiation absorption, which hinders following LWC variations. As a result, capacitance sensors readings are challenging to be interpreted quantitatively. Perspectives on future investigation are discussed to bring the proposed procedure towards long-term applications in snowpacks. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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