Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8894117 | Geoderma | 2018 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Soil erosion is a severe ecological and environmental problem and the main cause of land degradation in many places worldwide. Soil aggregate breakdown is the first key step of splash erosion and is strongly influenced by soil internal forces, including electrostatic, hydration, and van der Waals forces. However, little is known about the influence of soil internal forces on splash erosion. In this study, we demonstrated that both splash erosion rate (SER) and soil aggregate breaking strength (ABS) were significantly affected by soil internal forces. SER and ABS increased first (from 1 to 10â2â¯molâ¯Lâ1) then became stable (from 10â2 to 10â4â¯molâ¯Lâ1) with decreasing electrolyte concentration in bulk solution. The electrolyte concentration of 10â2â¯molâ¯Lâ1 in bulk solution was the critical point for both soils in splash erosion and soil aggregate stability. The experimental results can be well interpreted by the theoretical analysis of soil internal forces. The surface potential and electric field around soil particles increased with decreasing electrolyte concentration, thereby increasing the electrostatic repulsive force among soil particles. This phenomenon led to soil aggregate breakdown and release of fine soil particles. Soil splash erosion rate and aggregate stability showed a linear relationship (R2â¯=â¯0.83). Our results suggest that soil internal forces induce soil aggregate breakdown and then release of fine soil particles when the soil was wetted, supplying the original material for splash erosion. Furthermore, the raindrop impact force is the driving mechanism causing soil particle movement. In summary, splash erosion could be due to the coupling effects of soil internal forces and the raindrop impact force. Our study provides a possible internal controlling method for reducing splash erosion by adjusting soil internal forces between soil particles.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
Feinan Hu, Jingfang Liu, Chenyang Xu, Zilong Wang, Gang Liu, Hang Li, Shiwei Zhao,