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  4. Measurements of the pore-scale water flow through snow using Fluorescent Particle Tracking Velocimetry
 
research article

Measurements of the pore-scale water flow through snow using Fluorescent Particle Tracking Velocimetry

Walter, B.
•
Horender, S.
•
Gromke, C.
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2013
Water Resources Research

Fluorescent Particle Tracking Velocimetry (FPTV) measurements of the pore-scale water flow through the pore space of a wet-snow sample are presented to demonstrate the applicability of this measurement technique for snow. For the experiments, ice-cooled water seeded with micron sized fluorescent tracer particles is either sprinkled on top of a snow sample to investigate saturated and unsaturated gravity-driven flow or supplied from a reservoir below the snow sample to generate upward flow driven by capillary forces. The snow sample is illuminated with a laser light sheet and the fluorescent light of the particles transported with the water in the pore space is recorded with a high-speed camera equipped with an optical filter. Tracking algorithms are applied to the images to obtain flow paths and flow velocities. A flow loop found in a pore space for the case of saturated gravity flow together with the tortuosity of the particle trajectories indicate the three-dimensionality of the water flow in wet snow. The average vertical flow velocities in the pore spaces were 11.2 mm s(-1) for the downward saturated gravity flow and 9.6 mm s(-1) for the upward flow that is driven by capillary forces for the limited cases presented as examples of the measurement technique. In the case of unsaturated gravity-driven flow, the average and the maximum flow velocities were found to be 30 times smaller than for the saturated gravity flow. Velocity histograms show that the fraction of the total water flowing against the main flow direction was about 3-5%, and that the horizontal velocities average to zero for both the saturated gravity-driven and the capillary flow.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/2013Wr013960
Web of Science ID

WOS:000328683800020

Author(s)
Walter, B.
Horender, S.
Gromke, C.
Lehning, M.  
Date Issued

2013

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Published in
Water Resources Research
Volume

49

Issue

11

Start page

7448

End page

7456

Subjects

wet snow

•

flow in porous media

•

laser imaging technique

•

fluorescent tracer particles

•

particle trajectories

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CRYOS  
Available on Infoscience
January 20, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/100000
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