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2.10.6: Tensiometers

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    44341
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    Soil water tension (matric potential, ψm) can be measured by several methods. The oldest tool, and one that measures tension directly, is the tensiometer. Tensiometers (Figure 2.17) have three components: a water filled tube (usually transparent); a porous cup (usually ceramic) at one end of the tube; and a vacuum gauge (or manometer) at the other end. The tube is sealed at the gauge end. The tensiometer is installed in the field so that the porous cup is at the desired soil depth. The cup must have direct contact with the surrounding soil so that the water in the cup is hydraulically connected to the water in the soil. As the soil dries, water is “pulled” out of the tensiometer. Since the tube is sealed at the gauge end, vacuum increases in the tube as water is being pulled out. Flow continues until there is equilibrium between the water in the tensiometer and the soil water. The vacuum gauge is a direct indicator of soil water tension. Usually, the vacuum is registered in centibars (cb) and the scale reads from 0 to 100 cb. As the tension or vacuum approaches 1 bar, dissolved air in the water is released. The air accumulates in the top of the tube. When this happens, the readings are no longer reliable. Thus, the practical operating range for this instrument is 0 to 75 cb. A zero reading corresponds to a saturated soil, while a reading of 8 cb corresponds to FC for fine sand soils and a reading of about 20 cb is FC for silt loam soils, as shown in Figure 2.6. By using Figure 2.6, you should be able to demonstrate that, for fine sand, about 70% of the AWC has been depleted at 75 cb (the upper limit of the instrument), but only about 45% of the AWC has been depleted for silt loam at 75 cb. As will be discussed in Chapter 6, a common criterion for irrigation is to allow up to 50% depletion of the AWC before irrigation. This criterion indicates why the tensiometer has some limitations for irrigation management on finer-textured soils.

    Figure 2.17. Components of a typical tensiometer.

    Soil tensiometer schematic showing relative locations of ceramic tip, water-filled tube, vacuum gauge, and reservoir


    2.10.6: Tensiometers is shared under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.