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Freeze–thaw reshapes water, salt, and heat in saline farmland soil

Earth and Planetary Sciences research
Photo by Zakhar Vozhdaienko on Pexels · Pexels License
Research area:Soil scienceSoil waterWater content

What the study found

Freeze–thaw in a saline farmland soil changed water, salt, and heat movement in ways that varied with depth and season. The study found that snow and air temperature jointly shaped these changes, with frozen soil and snow increasing shallow soil water content and snowmelt lowering salt content.

Why the authors say this matters

The authors conclude that their findings provide a reference for parameterized characterization and quantitative assessment of water–salt processes in comparable saline soils. The study suggests this matters because it clarifies the mechanisms behind moisture recovery and salt redistribution during freeze–thaw.

What the researchers tested

The researchers studied a representative saline farmland in northern China using hourly in-situ monitoring and laboratory freeze–thaw experiments. They identified key periods and quantified the spatiotemporal evolution of coupled water–heat–salt dynamics and hydrothermal parameters.

What worked and what didn't

Relative permeability fell sharply during freezing, by up to eight orders of magnitude in surface layers and about three orders of magnitude in deeper layers. After thawing, permeability rose above the pre-freeze level and helped snowmelt infiltration and downward salt leaching; thermal conductivity increased by 20.76–56.78%, while volumetric heat capacity decreased by 22.30–39.41%, and the heat absorbed during thawing did not offset freezing losses. Shallow-soil water content increased by 32.20% relative to early winter, and salt content decreased by 15.44–34.02% during snowmelt infiltration.

What to keep in mind

The abstract describes one representative saline farmland in northern China, so the scope is limited to that setting. It does not describe additional limitations beyond the field-laboratory framework and the comparable-soil reference stated in the abstract.

Key points

  • Snow and air temperature jointly influenced vertical differences in heat and mass transfer.
  • Shallow soil water content increased by 32.20% relative to early winter.
  • Snowmelt infiltration reduced salt content by 15.44–34.02%.
  • Relative permeability decreased strongly during freezing and exceeded the pre-freeze level after thawing.
  • Thermal conductivity increased, while volumetric heat capacity decreased during the freeze–thaw process.

Disclosure

Research title:
Freeze–thaw reshapes water, salt, and heat in saline farmland soil
Authors:
Dongmei Ruan, Jianmin Bian, Yu Wang, Zhiqi Gu
Institutions:
Jilin University
Publication date:
2026-02-21
OpenAlex record:
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Image credit:
Photo by Zakhar Vozhdaienko on Pexels · Pexels License
AI provenance: This post was generated by OpenAI. The original authors did not write or review this post.