Dissertação
Padrão de umedecimento e movimento da água no solo sob uma fonte pontual de irrigação no gotejamento subsuperficial
Fecha
2018-11-09Autor
Almeida, Carlos Alberto Melo de
Institución
Resumen
The use of subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) has been increasing as a mean to deliver water,
fertilizers and pesticides to plants, being more effective. Increasing the water use efficiency is
one of the goals of irrigation management, since the water demand by human use and
industry is expected to grow significantly in the near future. To achieve all the subsurface drip
potential, some operational parameters optimization is required such as frequency and
irrigation time, dripper flow, installation depth and spacing, as well as knowledge of the water
distribution pattern. The distribution pattern and water movement can be accessed by direct
measurement or by modeling. In this way, the objective of this study was to measure and
simulate the water movement in a sandy loam soil, with two flows, in drip emitters installed at
different depths, of a subsurface drip irrigation system. Two experiments were carried out at
the experimental laboratory, located on Departamento de Engenharia Rural of Universidade
Federal de Santa Maria, during 2017 and 2018 years. It was used polyethylene containers
with a 380 mm diameter by a 630 mm height, filled with soil of a sandy loam texture (Rhodic
Paleudalf). The sources of variation consisted of : the drip emitters installation depth (12, 24
and 36 cm deep), the irrigation management (8 hours of continuous irrigation and 12 hours
intermittent irrigation), the emitters flow (0.9 and 1.8 liters hour-1). The Irrigation was
performed through 16 mm self-compensating drippers, with 20 cm spacing between emitters.
A set of FDR sensors, model CS616, was used to measure soil water content. The sensors
were installed in the depths of 8, 18, 28, 38, 48 and 58 cm, inside the containers with soil.
The Hydrus-2D numerical model was used to analyze the observed water content data and
to simulate the wetting front under each emitter. The observed soil water content data were
compared with those simulated using the root mean square error (RMSE), linear regression
coefficient forced to the origin (bo), determination coefficient (R2) and modeling efficiency
(EF) as statistical indices. The RMSE, for the emitter different depths, ranged from 0.01 to
0.06 cm3 cm-3, indicating good to very good agreement between the data observed and
simulated by the model. Irrigation time influenced the infiltration and formation of the wetting
front more than the emitter flow. The results simulated by the Hydrus-2D model
demonstrated a linear relationship of more than 65% with the observed data, making
possible its use to model water movement in subsurface drip irrigation. The observed
differences between the observed and simulated data, although not significant, occurred
during the first two hours of infiltration and are probably due to the effect of hysteresis or
imperfect measures in the soil hydraulic conductivity.