Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Science and Engineering Southern Cross University East Lismore NSW 2480 Australia
2. School of Civil Engineering The University of Sydney Sydney NSW 2006 Australia
3. Research School of Biology Australian National University Acton ACT 2601 Australia
Abstract
Summary
Plant leaf temperatures can differ from ambient air temperatures. A temperature gradient in a gas mixture gives rise to a phenomenon known as thermodiffusion, which operates in addition to ordinary diffusion. Whilst transpiration is generally understood to be driven solely by the ordinary diffusion of water vapour along a concentration gradient, we consider the implications of thermodiffusion for transpiration.
We develop a new modelling framework that introduces the effects of thermodiffusion on the transpiration rate, E.
By applying this framework, we quantify the proportion of E attributable to thermodiffusion for a set of physiological and environmental conditions, varied over a wide range.
Thermodiffusion is found to be most significant (in some cases > 30% of E) when a leaf‐to‐air temperature difference coincides with a relatively small water vapour concentration difference across the boundary layer; a boundary layer conductance that is large as compared to the stomatal conductance; or a relatively low transpiration rate. Thermodiffusion also alters the conditions required for the onset of reverse transpiration, and the rate at which this water vapour uptake occurs.
Funder
Australian Research Council
Cited by
1 articles.
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