Publication | Open Access
Calibration of soil moisture sensing with subsurface heated fiber optics using numerical simulation
47
Citations
27
References
2016
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringFiber OpticsSitu Calibration ProceduresHumidity SensorEarth ScienceSoil CharacterizationSoil PropertyHeat PulsesCalibrationNumerical SimulationSoil MoistureInstrumentationThermal Infrared Remote SensingGeographyFiber Optic SensingRadiometrySoil‐specific Calibration CurveOptical SensorsSensorsThermal Sensor
Abstract The heat pulse probe method can be implemented with actively heated fiber optics (AHFO) to obtain distributed measurements of soil water content (θ) by using reported soil thermal responses measured by Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS) and with a soil‐specific calibration relationship. However, most reported applications have been calibrated to homogeneous soils in a laboratory, while inexpensive efficient in situ calibration procedures useful in heterogeneous soils are lacking. Here we employed the Hydrus 2‐D/3‐D code to define a soil‐specific calibration curve. We define a 2‐D geometry of the fiber optic cable and the surrounding soil media, and simulate heat pulses to capture the soil thermal response at different soil water contents. The model was validated in an irrigated field using DTS data from two locations along the FO deployment in which reference moisture sensors were installed. Results indicate that θ was measured with the model‐based calibration with accuracy better than 0.022 m 3 m −3 .
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