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Publications
Helmholtz Centre Potsdam
GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Abstract (EDOC: 102)Abstract:
Various types of electrodes designed for the measurement of the electric field
in the soil or in sea water at period larger than one minute have been compared
in a one-year experiment in Garchy, France. The experiment included more than
fifty electrode pairs with liquid or absorbed electrolytes and Pb/PbCl_2,
Ag/AgCl, Cu/CuSO_4 and Cd/CdCl_2 metal-ion couples. The electrode parameters
were systematically measured in the laboratory and the electrodes were installed
in the field to constitute 50-meter long parallel dipoles separated by 2 meters.
Pairs of electrodes used for sea measurements were monitored in a salted water
vessel. Fourtytwo potential differences were recorded with a sampling interval
of 1 minute between May 1995 and April 1996. When electrodes are compared, large
differences are observed in the long term stability as well as in the senility
to diurnal variations, rainfall and soil saturation. For measurements in soil,
the installation method of the electrodes plays an important role. In salted
water, the best performing electrode pair has a drift of the order of 0.1 mV
per year. In soil, typical drifts for the best sensors are of the order of
0.2 mV per month in dry soil an 0.5 mV per month in soaked soil. Preferred
electrode designs and installation methods, depending on the external conditions
or the type of geophysical measurement, emerge from this experiment. In addition
to the magneto-telluric field, potential variations which are not electrode or
installation effects are observed and attributed to electrical sources in the
soil. (1997): A one-year systematic study of electrodes for long period measurements of the electric field in geophysical environments. Journal of Geomagnetism and Geoelectricity, 49, 11-12, 1677-1696. |
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