ID:
publications-2805
Type:
Peer reviewed articles
Year:
2016
Authors:
O. Merlin, V. G. Stefan, A. Amazirh, A. Chanzy, E. Ceschia, S. Er-Raki, P. Gentine, T. Tallec, J. Ezzahar, S. Bircher, J. Beringer, S. Khabba
Title:
Modeling soil evaporation efficiency in a range of soil and atmospheric conditions using a meta-analysis approach
Venue/Journal:
Water Resources Research
DOI:
10.1002/2015wr018233
Research type:
Uncategorized
Water System:
Irrigation Systems
Technical Focus:
Abstract:
AbstractA metaâanalysis dataâdriven approach is developed to represent the soil evaporative efficiency (SEE) defined as the ratio of actual to potential soil evaporation. The new model is tested across a bare soil database composed of more than 30 sites around the world, a clay fraction range of 0.02â0.56, a sand fraction range of 0.05â0.92, and about 30,000 acquisition times. SEE is modeled using a soil resistance (rss) formulation based on surface soil moisture (θ) and two resistance parameters and θefolding. The dataâdriven approach aims to express both parameters as a function of observable data including meteorological forcing, cutâoff soil moisture value at which SEE=0.5, and first derivative of SEE at , named . An analytical relationship between and is first built by running a soil energy balance model for two extreme conditions with rssâ=â0 and using meteorological forcing solely, and by approaching the middle point from the two (wet and dry) reference points. Two different methods are then investigated to estimate the pair either from the time series of SEE and θ observations for a given site, or using the soil texture information for all sites. The first method is based on an algorithm specifically designed to accomodate for strongly nonlinear relationships and potentially large random deviations of observed SEE from the mean observed . The second method parameterizes as a multiâlinear regression of clay and sand percentages, and sets to a constant mean value for all sites. The new model significantly outperformed the evaporation modules of ISBA (Interaction SolâBiosphèreâAtmosphère), HâTESSEL (HydrologyâTiled ECMWF Scheme for Surface Exchange over Land), and CLM (Community Land Model). It has potential for integration in various landâsurface schemes, and real calibration capabilities using combined thermal and microwave remote sensing data.
Link with Projects:
645642
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