Mechanical behavior of an agricultural soil

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Date
1991
Authors
Rajaram, Govindarajan
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Donald C. Erbach
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Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering

Since 1905, the Department of Agricultural Engineering, now the Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering (ABE), has been a leader in providing engineering solutions to agricultural problems in the United States and the world. The department’s original mission was to mechanize agriculture. That mission has evolved to encompass a global view of the entire food production system–the wise management of natural resources in the production, processing, storage, handling, and use of food fiber and other biological products.

History
In 1905 Agricultural Engineering was recognized as a subdivision of the Department of Agronomy, and in 1907 it was recognized as a unique department. It was renamed the Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering in 1990. The department merged with the Department of Industrial Education and Technology in 2004.

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1905–present

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  • Department of Agricultural Engineering (1907–1990)

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Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering
Abstract

Tillage plays a major role in food production. In developed countries, farmers practice excessive tillage. Soil scientists are recommending reduced tillage practices known as conservation tillage. In developing countries such as India, farmers practice indigenous tillage which has characteristics of conservation tillage. A review of the theoretical developments in tillage mechanics showed that there exists inadequate knowledge to predict the soil failure mechanisms, to predict the tool forces, or to determine the soil modifications caused by tillage. It is shown that there is a need to develop new theoretical concepts relevant to soil failure observed in agricultural soils, and that observations in soil failure can form the bases for a better understanding of how tillage modifies soil tilth;Agricultural soils are subject to seasonal wetting and drying that create drying stress in soil. Experiments were done in a clay loam soil to investigate the effect of drying stress on soil physical properties and on soil mechanical behavior as influenced by a model tine. A dry soil was subject to three higher moisture treatments and then each of them was dried to the initial moisture content. Results showed that the dried soil physical properties significantly differed from those of the unwetted soil. Soil strength and aggregate size increased with drying stress. Soil aggregate size and tine forces were greater in dried soils as compared to the unwetted soil;Experiments in wet and dry soils showed that the tine performance and soil properties resulting from tillage depended not only on moisture content but also whether a given moisture content was obtained by wetting a drier soil or by drying a wetter soil. Results showed that, at a given moisture content, the wetted soils failed by Fracture mode and offered relatively more draft than the dried soil which failed by "Preferential Fracture" mode. Tine forces were higher for wetted soils than for dried soils, due to hysteresis effect caused by wetting and drying.

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Tue Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 1991