Fragipan is a dense and usually brittle subsurface soil horizon, limiting the penetration of roots and the infiltration of water. The genesis of fragipan is still unclear, but a general agreement exists on the importance of wet-dry cycles. In addition, in argillic Bx horizon, the presence of cations affecting the clay dispersion/flocculation behaviour might be a key factor in fragipan dynamics. In order to gain knowledge on the specific effect of alternating moisture conditions on the evolution of aggregates collected from a Btx horizon, we evaluated the variations of physical properties caused by a wet-dry cycle using both deionized and Ca-enriched water on the 1–2 mm aggregate, and on newly formed aggregates (i.e. 2–5 and > 5 mm size classes) obtained after a lab experiment. The results were compared with a Bt horizon that did not show fragipan properties. Btx and Bt samples were collected from a Typic Fragiudalf developed on fluvio-glacial terraces in NW Italy. The two horizons had comparable clay content (around 13%), and their mineralogical composition was dominated by hydroxy-interlayered vermiculite and smectite. The fragipan 1–2 mm aggregates showed a low clay dispersion ratio (11.5%) before the treatments, together with low volume of macropores (74 mm3 g− 1), high volume of mesopores (111 mm− 3 g− 1), high slaking (30.1%), close packing of coarse particles and open arrangement of fine particles. The water treatment increased the amount of flocculated-clay in the new-aggregates, and Ca-treatment enhanced clay flocculation both in the newly formed and in the remaining 1–2 mm aggregates. The clay flocculation induced a denser arrangement of clay particles (≥ 0.44), and a consequent reduction of mesopores (from 56.2 to 66.1 mm− 3 g− 1), combined with the opening of the coarser particles packing (≤ 0.78). This new particle arrangement did not correspond to the specific combination of coarse/fine particles arrangement of fragipan. The relative percentage of slaking also decreased. Therefore, upon both deionized water and CaCl2 wetting and drying, the newly formed aggregates (i.e., 2–5 and > 5 mm) from disturbed fragic materials, as well as those that did not take part in the new aggregate formation (1–2 mm), did not show the specific physical properties of fragipan. The simulation of wet and dry cycle acted on clay colloidal behaviour, and the results suggested the degradation, rather than the enhancement, of Btx physical properties measurable in laboratory.

Simulating the effects of wet and dry on aggregate dynamics in argillic fragipan horizon

STANCHI, Silvia;BONIFACIO, Eleonora
Last
2017-01-01

Abstract

Fragipan is a dense and usually brittle subsurface soil horizon, limiting the penetration of roots and the infiltration of water. The genesis of fragipan is still unclear, but a general agreement exists on the importance of wet-dry cycles. In addition, in argillic Bx horizon, the presence of cations affecting the clay dispersion/flocculation behaviour might be a key factor in fragipan dynamics. In order to gain knowledge on the specific effect of alternating moisture conditions on the evolution of aggregates collected from a Btx horizon, we evaluated the variations of physical properties caused by a wet-dry cycle using both deionized and Ca-enriched water on the 1–2 mm aggregate, and on newly formed aggregates (i.e. 2–5 and > 5 mm size classes) obtained after a lab experiment. The results were compared with a Bt horizon that did not show fragipan properties. Btx and Bt samples were collected from a Typic Fragiudalf developed on fluvio-glacial terraces in NW Italy. The two horizons had comparable clay content (around 13%), and their mineralogical composition was dominated by hydroxy-interlayered vermiculite and smectite. The fragipan 1–2 mm aggregates showed a low clay dispersion ratio (11.5%) before the treatments, together with low volume of macropores (74 mm3 g− 1), high volume of mesopores (111 mm− 3 g− 1), high slaking (30.1%), close packing of coarse particles and open arrangement of fine particles. The water treatment increased the amount of flocculated-clay in the new-aggregates, and Ca-treatment enhanced clay flocculation both in the newly formed and in the remaining 1–2 mm aggregates. The clay flocculation induced a denser arrangement of clay particles (≥ 0.44), and a consequent reduction of mesopores (from 56.2 to 66.1 mm− 3 g− 1), combined with the opening of the coarser particles packing (≤ 0.78). This new particle arrangement did not correspond to the specific combination of coarse/fine particles arrangement of fragipan. The relative percentage of slaking also decreased. Therefore, upon both deionized water and CaCl2 wetting and drying, the newly formed aggregates (i.e., 2–5 and > 5 mm) from disturbed fragic materials, as well as those that did not take part in the new aggregate formation (1–2 mm), did not show the specific physical properties of fragipan. The simulation of wet and dry cycle acted on clay colloidal behaviour, and the results suggested the degradation, rather than the enhancement, of Btx physical properties measurable in laboratory.
2017
305
407
416
Argillic horizons; Clay dispersion/flocculation; BET; Hg porosimetry; Wet aggregate stability
Falsone, Gloria; Stanchi, Silvia; Bonifacio, Eleonora
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Falsoneetal2017GEoderma.pdf

Accesso riservato

Tipo di file: PDF EDITORIALE
Dimensione 453.49 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
453.49 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Geodermaopen_4aperto.pdf

Open Access dal 01/09/2019

Tipo di file: POSTPRINT (VERSIONE FINALE DELL’AUTORE)
Dimensione 848.42 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
848.42 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1644875
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 3
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 3
social impact