Leaf hydraulic networks play an important role not only in fluid transport but also in maintaining whole-plant water status through transient environmental changes in soil-based water supply or air humidity. Both water potential and hydraulic resistance vary spatially throughout the leaf transport network, consisting of xylem, stomata and water-storage cells, and portions of the leaf areas far from the leaf base can be disproportionately disadvantaged under water stress. Besides the suppression of transpiration and reduction of water loss caused by stomatal closure, the leaf capacitance of water storage, which can also vary locally, is thought to be crucial for the maintenance of leaf water status. In order to study the fluid dynamics in these networks, we develop a spatially explicit, capacitive model which is able to capture the local spatiotemporal changes of water potential and flow rate in monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous leaves. In electrical-circuit analogs described by Ohm's law, we implement linear capacitors imitating water storage, and we present both analytical calculations of a uniform one-dimensional model and numerical simulation methods for general spatially explicit network models, and their relation to conventional lumped-element models. Calculation and simulation results are shown for the uniform model, which mimics key properties of a monocotyledonous grass leaf. We illustrate water status of a well-watered leaf, and the lowering of water potential and transpiration rate caused by excised water source or reduced air humidity. We show that the time scales of these changes under water stress are hugely affected by leaf capacitance and resistances to capacitors, in addition to stomatal resistance. Through this modeling of a grass leaf, we confirm the presence of uneven water distribution over leaf area, and also discuss the importance of considering the spatial variation of leaf hydraulic traits in plant biology.
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Enhanced Water Evaporation with Floating Synthetic Leaves
The evaporation of water exposed to a subsaturated environment is relevant for a variety of water harvesting and energy harvesting applications. Here, we show that the diffusive evaporation rate of water can be greatly modulated by floating a nanoporous synthetic leaf at the water’s free interface. The floating leaf was able to evaporate at least as much water as a free interface under equivalent conditions, which is remarkable considering that only about a third of the leaf’s interface is open to the ambient.We attribute the enhanced evaporation of the water menisci to their sharp curvature and three-dimensional surface area. At low humidities the water menisci cannot achieve a local equilibrium, due to the mismatch in water activity across the interface outcompeting the negative Laplace pressure. As a result, the mensici retreat partway into the leaf, which increases the local humidity directly above the menisci until equilibrium is reached. Using a ceramic disk with pore diameters of 160 nm, we find the surprising result that leaves exposed to an ambient relative humidity of 95% can evaporate water at the same rate as leaves exposed to only 50% humidity, due to the long and tortuous vapor pathway in the latter case.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1653631
- PAR ID:
- 10088130
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- International Heat Transfer Conference
- Volume:
- IHTC16
- ISSN:
- 2377-424X
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 23736
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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