Feasibility study on prepolarized surface nuclear magnetic resonance for soil moisture measurements

Abstract

In the past few years, small-scale (2 m) prepolarized surface nuclear magnetic resonance (SNMR) has gained increasing interest in the research community. As recent studies demonstrated, the application of a strong prepolarization field enhances the SNMR signal of coils with a footprint <1 m2 up to a level that even enables investigations in urban areas. In particular, it is expected that this noninvasive method provides the soil moisture distribution in the upper 2 m of the subsurface in the near future. However, until now all field experiments have been carried out on water reservoirs only, in an approach to test and implement this rather new technique into the field of SNMR applications. We present the first prepolarized SNMR measurement on a real soil and demonstrate the general feasibility of this technique to qualitatively and quantitatively detect soil moisture in the upper first 0.5 m. Our soil moisture measurements are validated by independent time domain reflectometry data. To complement the field experiments with numerical simulations, we adapted the underlying SNMR spin dynamics simulations and account for prepolarization switch-off effects in the forward modeling of the SNMR excitation.

Description
Keywords
Moisture determination, Moisture meters, Noninvasive medical procedures, Nuclear magnetic resonance, Reservoirs (water), Soil moisture, Spin fluctuations, Time domain analysis, Dynamics simulation, Feasibility studies, Noninvasive methods, Research communities, Soil moisture distribution, Soil moisture measurement, Switch-off effects, Time domain reflectometry, Soil surveys
Citation
Hiller, T., Costabel, S., Radić, T., Dlugosch, R., & Müller‐Petke, M. (2021). Feasibility study on prepolarized surface nuclear magnetic resonance for soil moisture measurements. 20(5). https://doi.org//10.1002/vzj2.20138
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported