The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless Media

An essential component of a building-integrated vegetation system, such as an extensive green roof, is the layer of lightweight planting medium that supports rooting and stores water. Predicting and describing the stormwater management performance of green roofs requires reliable data regarding the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jenny Hill, Brent Sleep, Jennifer Drake, Marisa Fryer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-05-01
Series:Vadose Zone Journal
Online Access:https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/18/1/180176
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spelling doaj-964ed210692e4f73b172c1c3822a93172020-11-25T01:29:41ZengWileyVadose Zone Journal1539-16632019-05-0118110.2136/vzj2018.09.0176The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless MediaJenny HillBrent SleepJennifer DrakeMarisa FryerAn essential component of a building-integrated vegetation system, such as an extensive green roof, is the layer of lightweight planting medium that supports rooting and stores water. Predicting and describing the stormwater management performance of green roofs requires reliable data regarding the water retention properties of the planting medium. Ten materials proposed for use on green roofs, including four mineral components, three biological components, and three commercial blends, were characterized through measurement of their water release curves (WRCs). In combination with the particle size distributions, the resultant data demonstrate that some of the materials contain measurable intraparticle pore networks in addition to the interparticle void spaces described in classical soil hydrology. The WRCs were also used to model the maximum water storage under static equilibrium conditions throughout a 15-cm profile of each material. In freely draining, unsaturated green roof systems, the role of the intraparticle pores may be limited to increasing microscale roughness of particle surfaces, thereby reducing film flow under drier conditions. The highly organic, biologically derived materials—screened compost, bark fines, and shredded wood—demonstrated hydrophobicity when air dried, but wetting occurred within <30 min on all occasions, which would be within the time frame of many rainstorms. As with natural soils, the saturated hydraulic conductivity was lower in materials with a higher proportion of fines (<106 μm).https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/18/1/180176
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jenny Hill
Brent Sleep
Jennifer Drake
Marisa Fryer
spellingShingle Jenny Hill
Brent Sleep
Jennifer Drake
Marisa Fryer
The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless Media
Vadose Zone Journal
author_facet Jenny Hill
Brent Sleep
Jennifer Drake
Marisa Fryer
author_sort Jenny Hill
title The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless Media
title_short The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless Media
title_full The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless Media
title_fullStr The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless Media
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Intraparticle Porosity and Interparticle Voids on the Hydraulic Properties of Soilless Media
title_sort effect of intraparticle porosity and interparticle voids on the hydraulic properties of soilless media
publisher Wiley
series Vadose Zone Journal
issn 1539-1663
publishDate 2019-05-01
description An essential component of a building-integrated vegetation system, such as an extensive green roof, is the layer of lightweight planting medium that supports rooting and stores water. Predicting and describing the stormwater management performance of green roofs requires reliable data regarding the water retention properties of the planting medium. Ten materials proposed for use on green roofs, including four mineral components, three biological components, and three commercial blends, were characterized through measurement of their water release curves (WRCs). In combination with the particle size distributions, the resultant data demonstrate that some of the materials contain measurable intraparticle pore networks in addition to the interparticle void spaces described in classical soil hydrology. The WRCs were also used to model the maximum water storage under static equilibrium conditions throughout a 15-cm profile of each material. In freely draining, unsaturated green roof systems, the role of the intraparticle pores may be limited to increasing microscale roughness of particle surfaces, thereby reducing film flow under drier conditions. The highly organic, biologically derived materials—screened compost, bark fines, and shredded wood—demonstrated hydrophobicity when air dried, but wetting occurred within <30 min on all occasions, which would be within the time frame of many rainstorms. As with natural soils, the saturated hydraulic conductivity was lower in materials with a higher proportion of fines (<106 μm).
url https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/vzj/articles/18/1/180176
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