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Article Dans Une Revue Environmental Science and Technology Année : 2014

Modeling Pesticide Volatilization: Testing the Additional Effect of Gaseous Adsorption on Soil Solid Surfaces

Résumé

Pesticide volatilization from bare soil exhibits usually a diurnal cycle with a potentially large decrease when the soil surface dries. We assume here that this decrease may be due to the increase in adsorption of gaseous pesticides to soil under dry conditions. Thus, a precise description of the change with time of water content of the soil surface and of additional process such as gaseous adsorption is required. We used the Volt’Air model: we first extended the van Genuchten curve to drier conditions and then inserted a partitioning coefficient of the pesticide between the air-filled pore space and the soil constituents. This coefficient was calculated by a quantum-chemistry-based method with a dependence on the Specific Surface Area of the soil (SSA) and Relative Humidity (RH) of the air-filled pore space. These developments were assessed by comparing with two data sets on volatilization of trifluralin applied to bare soil. The updated Volt’Air model allowed a better description of the volatilization dynamics on a diurnal cycle (increasing efficiency factor from 0.85 to 0.96 and −2.73 to 0.17 and decreasing RMSE from 146 to 78 and 353 to 168 for both scenarios) as well as the effect of a rewetting situation. Recommendations are made for further refining the description of this process together with the soil water conditions.
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Dates et versions

hal-01192471 , version 1 (02-09-2015)

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Lucas Garcia, Carole Bedos, Sophie Génermont, Pierre Benoit, Enrique Barriuso, et al.. Modeling Pesticide Volatilization: Testing the Additional Effect of Gaseous Adsorption on Soil Solid Surfaces. Environmental Science and Technology, 2014, 48 (9), pp.4991-4998. ⟨10.1021/es5000879⟩. ⟨hal-01192471⟩
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