Synergistic water absorption and release in water storage clay: Roles of particle size and hierarchical pore structure.
Zhao Z, Ma J, Zheng L, Sun R, Sun X
Soil Health
Mixing this waste-derived clay into a drought-stressed garden bed could mean watering half as often — it drinks in rain fast and meters it back out to roots over days.
Scientists studied a special clay that can soak up water quickly and then let it go slowly over time — like a sponge that also has tiny reservoirs inside. It works because it has two kinds of holes: big ones that fill fast like highways for water, and tiny ones that hold water back for a long, slow drip. Researchers found that grinding the clay to a medium grain size hits the sweet spot, giving you the best of both — fast absorption and long-lasting release.
Key Findings
WSC has a two-scale pore network: millimeter-scale macropores enable rapid water uptake, while micrometer-scale micropores provide slow, sustained release lasting significantly longer than loess soil.
WSC dramatically outperformed loess (a common natural soil) in both unsaturated capillary absorption and saturated water uptake under experimental conditions.
An intermediate particle size range optimally balanced absorption capacity and sustained-release longevity, establishing a quantitative structure-performance relationship.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers discovered that a clay material made from waste products absorbs water rapidly and releases it slowly, thanks to a two-tiered pore structure — large channels for quick uptake and tiny pores for slow release. The right particle size amplifies both effects, making it a promising low-cost additive for dry soils.
Abstract Preview
Water Storage Clay (WSC) is promising for soil moisture regulation, yet the pore-structure mechanisms governing its hydrodynamics remain poorly understood. We hypothesize that a hierarchical pore a...
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