This study aims at developing an integrated system comprising TDR technologies for continuous and 3D monitoring of the vadose zone with special focus on the aerial distribution of water during an artificial sprinkling experiment. The system was tested during field artificial infiltration experiments. The objective of this study is to evaluate a flexible long TDR sensor in the field during a sprinkling and infiltration experiment that mimics rainfall and irrigation events through zonal wetting, monitor the resulting water flows and compare the findings with those from custom rigid spatial TDR sensors. This study exclusively used the TDR technique to measure soil moisture changes during the infiltration experiment, utilizing both custom rigid spatial sensors and a flexible sensor. The results indicate that the flexible sensor, which can be installed in the soil in arrays that rigid sensors cannot, achieved logical and coherent soil moisture estimations, proving that it could also be used as a standalone sensor for soil volumetric water content measurements. The use of long flexible sensors, along with long rigid sensors, facilitates continuous, precise, and 3D monitoring of moisture changes across larger soil volumes, transcending traditional point measurements and 1D soil moisture profiles typically associated with the TDR technique.
Παπαδόπουλος et al. (Sat,) studied this question.