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Parameterizing a coupled surface-subsurface three-dimensional soil hydrological model to evaluate the efficiency of a runoff water harvesting technique

Koen M. J. Verbist, S. Pierreux, W. M. Cornelis, R. McLaren and D. Gabriels
Parameterizing a coupled surface-subsurface three-dimensional soil hydrological model to evaluate the efficiency of a runoff water harvesting technique (in Model-data fusion in the vadose zone, Johan A. Huisman (editor), Jasper A. Vrugt (editor) and Ty P. A. Ferre (editor))
Vadose Zone Journal (November 2012) 11 (4)

Abstract

Tools are needed to quantitatively evaluate the efficiency of water harvesting techniques in dryland environments under a wide range of climatic and soil physical conditions. In a case study for the arid zone of Chile, a detailed water balance was calculated using a coupled surface-subsurface hydrological model (HydroGeoSphere). In a first step, the model was parameterized with detailed runoff and soil water content data collected during simulated rainfall to calibrate surface and subsurface flow processes simultaneously, using six responsive parameters identified by a global sensitivity analysis. The calibrated model accurately reproduced observed soil moisture contents (R (super 2) =0.92) and runoff amounts (R (super 2) =0.97), and represented the overflowing infiltration trench, which is a clear improvement over existing frameworks that do not consider surface-subsurface flow interactions. A comparative analysis with a natural slope demonstrated that the trench was efficient in capturing runoff under high rainfall intensities, such as the one simulated, resulting in a significant decrease (46%) of runoff. In the final section, a detailed water balance of the trench was calculated for four characteristic years with increasing precipitation. Significant differences in the water balance components were only observed for the very wet year (with a return period of 67 yr), where 64% of the potential runoff was effectively harvested and stored in the soil profile. As such, this test case shows the ability of HydroGeoSphere to adequately represent the water balance components of a runoff water harvesting technique and shows its potential to become an effective tool for optimal water harvesting design, while taking both soil physical and climatic constraints into account.


ISSN: 1539-1663
Serial Title: Vadose Zone Journal
Serial Volume: 11
Serial Issue: 4
Title: Parameterizing a coupled surface-subsurface three-dimensional soil hydrological model to evaluate the efficiency of a runoff water harvesting technique
Title: Model-data fusion in the vadose zone
Author(s): Verbist, Koen M. J.Pierreux, S.Cornelis, W. M.McLaren, R.Gabriels, D.
Author(s): Huisman, Johan A.editor
Author(s): Vrugt, Jasper A.editor
Author(s): Ferre, Ty P. A.editor
Affiliation: Ghent University, Department of Soil Management, Ghent, Belgium
Affiliation: Forschungszentrum Juelich, Agrosphere, Julich, Germany
Published: 201211
Text Language: English
Publisher: Soil Science Society of America, Madison, WI, United States
References: 107
Accession Number: 2013-009605
Categories: Hydrogeology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 7 tables
S30°00'45" - S30°00'45", W71°02'37" - W71°02'37"
Secondary Affiliation: University of California at Davis, USA, United StatesUniversity of Arizona, USA, United StatesUniversity of Waterloo, CAN, Canada
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Soil Science Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201307
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