Soil and Water Management Research Site Logo
ARS Home About Us Helptop nav spacerContact Us En Espanoltop nav spacer
Printable VersionPrintable Version     E-mail this pageE-mail this page
Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture
Search
  Advanced Search
 
Programs and Projects
Subjects of Investigation
 

Research Project: IMPROVING WATER PRODUCTIVITY AND NEW WATER MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGIES TO SUSTAIN RURAL ECONOMIES

Location: Soil and Water Management Research

Title: A waveguide-on-access-tube (WOAT) TDR sensor for deep soil water content and bulk EC

Authors

Research conducted cooperatively with:
item

Submitted to: ASA-CSSA-SSSA Annual Meeting Abstracts
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: August 19, 2012
Publication Date: October 22, 2012
Citation: Evett, S.R., Casanova, J.J., Schwartz, R.C. 2012. A waveguide-on-access-tube (WOAT) TDR sensor for deep soil water content and bulk EC [abstract]. ASA-CSSA-SSSA Annual Meeting Abstracts. 2012 CDROM. Paper No. 59-11.

Technical Abstract: A waveguide-on-access-tube (WOAT) TDR sensor was invented and the design optimized through a combination of electromagnetic modeling and several rounds of prototyping and testing in air, water, mixtures of water and ethylene glycol, sand, and silty clay loam soils over a range of water contents and bulk electrical conductivities. Limited field-testing showed the feasibility of the sensor system using a conventional TDR instrument cabled through a multiplexer to each waveguide triode. WOAT sensor segments were designed as 20-cm long tubes with waveguide triodes on opposite sides of the tube, a proprietary TDR circuit embedded in the tube wall and electrical bus connectors joining the bus between these WOAT segments. WOAT segments can be used individually or joined to make an access tube that can be inserted into the soil to indeterminant, user-chosen depth (=> 3 m). The electrical bus carries power and digital signals to the WOAT system head for storage and/or wireless transmission elsewhere. The presentation will discuss field tests from summer 2012 during which WOAT segments will be installed in an irrigated field for testing in a closed-loop feedback sensing system for irrigation management

   

 
Project Team
Brauer, David - Dave
Colaizzi, Paul
Gowda, Prasanna
Lascano, Robert
Acosta-Martinez, Veronica
Baker, Jeff
Tolk, Judy
Evett, Steven - Steve
Howell, Terry
Baumhardt, Roland - Louis
Schwartz, Robert
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Water Availability and Water Management (211)
  Climate Change, Soils, and Emissions (212)
 
Related Projects
   WATER CONSERVATION TECHNOLOGIES AND MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN THE OGALLALA AQUIFER REGION - KSU
   WATER CONSERVATION TECHNOLOGIES AND MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN THE OGALLALA AQUIFER REGION - TAMU
   CROP EVAPOTRANSPIRATION DETERMINATION USING EDDY COVARIANCE FLUXES, HIGH RESOLUTION REMOTE SENSING IMAGERY & A SURFACE TEMPERATURE APPROACH
   WATER CONSERVATION TECHNOLOGIES AND MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN THE OGALLALA AQUIFER REGION - TTU
   WATER CONSERVATION TECHNOLOGIES AND MANAGEMENT PRACTICES IN THE OGALLALA AQUIFER REGION - WTAMU
   ESTIMATING PERCENT COVER WITH HIGH RESOLUTION IMAGERY IN THE TEXAS HIGH PLAINS
   IMPROVING WATER PRODUCTIVITY AND NEW WATER MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGIES TO SUSTAIN RURAL ECONOMIES-KSU
   IMPROVING WATER PRODUCTIVITY AND NEW WATER MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGIES TO SUSTAIN RURAL ECONOMIES-TAMU
   IMPROVING WATER PRODUCTIVITY AND NEW WATER MANAGEMENT TECNOLOGIES TO SUSTAIN RURAL ECONOMIES-TTU
   IMPROVING WATER PRODUCTIVITY AND NEW WATER MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGIES TO SUSTAIN RURAL ECONOMIES-WTAMU
 
 
Last Modified: 05/25/2013
ARS Home | USDA.gov | Site Map | Policies and Links 
FOIA | Accessibility Statement | Privacy Policy | Nondiscrimination Statement | Information Quality | USA.gov | White House