Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (Dec 2021)

An inverse dielectric mixing model at 50 MHz that considers soil organic carbon

  • C.-H. Park,
  • C.-H. Park,
  • A. Berg,
  • M. H. Cosh,
  • A. Colliander,
  • A. Behrendt,
  • H. Manns,
  • J. Hong,
  • J. Lee,
  • R. Zhang,
  • V. Wulfmeyer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-25-6407-2021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25
pp. 6407 – 6420

Abstract

Read online

The prevalent soil moisture probe algorithms are based on a polynomial function that does not account for the variability in soil organic matter. Users are expected to choose a model before application: either a model for mineral soil or a model for organic soil. Both approaches inevitably suffer from limitations with respect to estimating the volumetric soil water content in soils with a wide range of organic matter content. In this study, we propose a new algorithm based on the idea that the amount of soil organic matter (SOM) is related to major uncertainties in the in situ soil moisture data obtained using soil probe instruments. To test this theory, we derived a multiphase inversion algorithm from a physically based dielectric mixing model capable of using the SOM amount, performed a selection process from the multiphase model outcomes, and tested whether this new approach improves the accuracy of soil moisture (SM) data probes. The validation of the proposed new soil probe algorithm was performed using both gravimetric and dielectric data from the Soil Moisture Active Passive Validation Experiment in 2012 (SMAPVEX12). The new algorithm is more accurate than the previous soil-probe algorithm, resulting in a slightly improved correlation (0.824 to 0.848), 12 % lower root mean square error (RMSE; 0.0824 to 0.0727 cm3 cm−3), and 95 % less bias (−0.0042 to 0.0001 cm3 cm−3). These results suggest that applying the new dielectric mixing model together with global SOM estimates will result in more reliable soil moisture reference data for weather and climate models and satellite validation.