Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4580569 Journal of Hydrology 2006 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

The spatial variability of preferential pathways for water and chemical transport in a field soil, as visualized through dye infiltration experiments, was studied by applying configuration entropy and multifractal analysis. After dye infiltration into a 4 m plot located on a Vertisol soil near College Station, TX, horizontal planes in the subsoil were exposed at 5-cm intervals, and dye stain patterns were photographed. Each of the digitized high-resolution dye images obtained were analysed calculating the maximum configuration entropy (H(L)), the characteristic length (L), and the generalized dimensions (Dq). The results indicate that H(L) and L are two useful descriptors that give an optimal scale of discrimination in the spatial arrangement of the dye tracer at each horizontal section. In addition, L can be used to choose the scale range at which the multifractal analysis should be applied. It has been showed that Dq, being q>0, depend much more on the percentage of black pixels than on the image structure when a box-counting method is used.Finally, a multifractal analysis was applied to maximum dye infiltration depth and amount of dye pixels bellow the area studied, obtained by merging images from the 16 exposed planes. The results show a multiscaling structure and a consistent Dq for both measures. This could be useful for statistically describing preferential flow path geometry and flow processes under field conditions.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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