Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration

Soil hydrophobicity has been frequently reported. It is usually associated with the occurrence of overland flow and floods. Therefore, it is important to have a deep understanding of the effect of soil hydrophobicity on infiltration. In this research, the effect of a hydrophobic sand layer on infi...

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Main Author: Tong, Wan Yi
Other Authors: Leong Eng Choon
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141932
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1419322020-06-12T01:39:51Z Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration Tong, Wan Yi Leong Eng Choon School of Civil and Environmental Engineering CECLEONG@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical Soil hydrophobicity has been frequently reported. It is usually associated with the occurrence of overland flow and floods. Therefore, it is important to have a deep understanding of the effect of soil hydrophobicity on infiltration. In this research, the effect of a hydrophobic sand layer on infiltration in a layered soil column was studied. Ponded infiltration experiment was done with a 5 cm thick fine sand layer overlying a coarse sand layer in a 100 cm tall infiltration column. The fine sand layer was then replaced by hydrophobic fine sand to study the effect of hydrophobicity on the infiltration. The results were also compared with the Hydrus 1-D simulated results. Infiltration of hydrophobic fine sand did not start when the water ponding depth was 2 cm but it began when the water ponding depth was increased to 10 cm. A delay start of infiltration was observed in hydrophobic fine sand case. The infiltration rate and cumulative infiltration were lower than the untreated fine sand. Infiltration rate was rising until it reached 150 min and remained steady at 0.0497 cm/min. The cumulative infiltration curve showed concave upward shape in contrast to the linearly increasing curve of untreated fine sand case. Finger flow occurred in hydrophobic fine sand layer during infiltration. Hydrus 1-D was able to simulate the infiltration with the untreated fine sand layer and hydrophobic fine sand layer with sufficient accuracy. However, the increasing infiltration rate curve could not be simulated due to the limitation of the Hydrus 1-D. Bachelor of Engineering (Civil) 2020-06-12T01:39:51Z 2020-06-12T01:39:51Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141932 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical
Tong, Wan Yi
Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration
description Soil hydrophobicity has been frequently reported. It is usually associated with the occurrence of overland flow and floods. Therefore, it is important to have a deep understanding of the effect of soil hydrophobicity on infiltration. In this research, the effect of a hydrophobic sand layer on infiltration in a layered soil column was studied. Ponded infiltration experiment was done with a 5 cm thick fine sand layer overlying a coarse sand layer in a 100 cm tall infiltration column. The fine sand layer was then replaced by hydrophobic fine sand to study the effect of hydrophobicity on the infiltration. The results were also compared with the Hydrus 1-D simulated results. Infiltration of hydrophobic fine sand did not start when the water ponding depth was 2 cm but it began when the water ponding depth was increased to 10 cm. A delay start of infiltration was observed in hydrophobic fine sand case. The infiltration rate and cumulative infiltration were lower than the untreated fine sand. Infiltration rate was rising until it reached 150 min and remained steady at 0.0497 cm/min. The cumulative infiltration curve showed concave upward shape in contrast to the linearly increasing curve of untreated fine sand case. Finger flow occurred in hydrophobic fine sand layer during infiltration. Hydrus 1-D was able to simulate the infiltration with the untreated fine sand layer and hydrophobic fine sand layer with sufficient accuracy. However, the increasing infiltration rate curve could not be simulated due to the limitation of the Hydrus 1-D.
author2 Leong Eng Choon
author_facet Leong Eng Choon
Tong, Wan Yi
format Final Year Project
author Tong, Wan Yi
author_sort Tong, Wan Yi
title Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration
title_short Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration
title_full Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration
title_fullStr Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration
title_full_unstemmed Effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration
title_sort effect of hydrophobic soils on infiltration
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/141932
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