tensiometers

TEROS 31 and TEROS 32 tensiometers



overview

  • Low cost, easy to install, METER Group tensiometers
  • Read with a handheld meter or connect to a data logger
  • SDI-12 output for digital devices such as LoRaWAN and NB-IoT
  • Outputs soil water potential and soil temperature
  • Ideal for field, lab or soil column installations

 

The TEROS 31/32 are ideal soil water potential measuring devices for Australian and New Zealand scientists and engineers. The tensiometers are manufactured by METER Group (formally UMS and Decagon Devices) and are considered the most accurate, reliable and rugged tensiometers available. Consequently, the tensiometers are used across a wide range of applications in Australia and New Zealand, from soil columns experiments in Queensland and Auckland, to agricultural monitoring in Western Australia and the South Island and mining, landfill and other engineering projects.

 

TEROS 31 and TEROS 32 compared

The TEROS 31 and TEROS 32 are both tensiometers with SDI-12 digital output. The main difference between the models is their size.

The TEROS 31 diameter is 0.5 cm and lengths range between 2 and 20 cm. The TEROS 31 is a miniature tensiometer typically used for laboratory applications, soil columns, pots, or other applications with a small soil or substrate volume.

The TEROS 32 diameter is 2.5 cm and lengths range between 40 and 120 cm. The TEROS 32 is a traditional style tensiometer and is wider and longer than the TEROS 31 mini tensiometer. The TEROS 32 is typically used in field applications for hydrology, engineering, agriculture, irrigation management and more. The TEROS 32 can also be used for soil columns or other laboratory applications.

 

 

why measure water potential or tension with a tensiometer?

Water potential, by definition, is a measure of the difference in potential energy between the water in a sample and the water in a reference pool of pure, free water. The tensiometer is an actualization of this definition.

The tensiometer tube contains a pool of (theoretically) pure, free water. This reservoir is connected (through a permeable membrane) to a soil sample. Thanks to the second law of thermodynamics, water moves from the reservoir to the soil until its energy is equal on both sides of the membrane. That creates a vacuum in the tube. The tensiometer uses a negative pressure gauge (a vacuometer) to measure the strength of that vacuum and describes water potential in terms of pressure.

Tensiometers are probably the oldest type of water potential instrument (the initial concept dates at least to Livingston in 1908), but they can still be quite useful. In fact, in the wet range, a high-quality tensiometer used skillfully, can have excellent accuracy.

 

 

TEROS 31 (T5, T5x)

TEROS 32

manual & docs

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