Logan Schmidt
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View article: Reversible Strong Metal‐Support Interactions in Co/TiO <sub>2</sub> Catalysts Driven by CO <sub>2</sub>
Reversible Strong Metal‐Support Interactions in Co/TiO <sub>2</sub> Catalysts Driven by CO <sub>2</sub> Open
Strong metal–support interactions can significantly influence catalytic performance. On titania supports, these interactions often involve the formation of a substoichiometric TiO X overlayer during high‐temperature reduction, which can be…
View article: Trees Enhance Rock Moisture Storage: A Major Pool in Karst Drylands and Crucial During Droughts
Trees Enhance Rock Moisture Storage: A Major Pool in Karst Drylands and Crucial During Droughts Open
Woody plant encroachment is a global phenomenon, observed in many of the world's drylands. In those with shallow soils overlying karst geology, rock moisture can be an important source of water for woody plants. This source can be particul…
View article: A simple infiltrometer automated with a user‐friendly pressure datalogger
A simple infiltrometer automated with a user‐friendly pressure datalogger Open
We have constructed a new, simplified constant‐head infiltrometer automated with a self‐contained water level datalogger (HOBO U20L‐01) repurposed to measure changes in gas pressure inside an inverted bottle reservoir. Our field tests of s…
View article: Ecohydrologic Dynamics of Rock Moisture in a Montane Catchment of the Colorado Front Range
Ecohydrologic Dynamics of Rock Moisture in a Montane Catchment of the Colorado Front Range Open
Warming across the western United States continues to reduce snowpack, lengthen growing seasons, and increase atmospheric demand, leading to uncertainty about moisture availability in montane forests. As many upland forests have thin soils…
View article: Bedrock Vadose Zone Storage Dynamics Under Extreme Drought: Consequences for Plant Water Availability, Recharge, and Runoff
Bedrock Vadose Zone Storage Dynamics Under Extreme Drought: Consequences for Plant Water Availability, Recharge, and Runoff Open
Bedrock vadose zone water storage (i.e., rock moisture) dynamics are rarely observed but potentially key to understanding drought responses. Exploiting a borehole network at a Mediterranean blue oak savanna site—Rancho Venada—we document h…
View article: Using time-lapse borehole NMR relaxation measurements to investigate the relationship between bedrock weathering and plant-available water storage
Using time-lapse borehole NMR relaxation measurements to investigate the relationship between bedrock weathering and plant-available water storage Open
Time-lapse borehole nuclear magnetic resonance (bNMR) relaxation is a promising method for linking water content changes in the unsaturated region of the critical zone with pore-scale properties associated with bedrock weathering. The satu…
View article: Bedrock vadose zone storage dynamics under extreme drought: consequences for plant water availability, recharge, and runoff
Bedrock vadose zone storage dynamics under extreme drought: consequences for plant water availability, recharge, and runoff Open
Earth and Space Science Open Archive This work has been accepted for publication in Water Resources Research. Version of RecordESSOAr is a venue for early communication or feedback before peer review. Data may be preliminary. Learn more ab…
View article: Bedrock vadose zone storage dynamics under extreme drought: consequences for plant water availability, recharge, and runoff
Bedrock vadose zone storage dynamics under extreme drought: consequences for plant water availability, recharge, and runoff Open
Earth and Space Science Open Archive This work has been accepted for publication in Water Resources Research. Version of RecordESSOAr is a venue for early communication or feedback before peer review. Data may be preliminary. Learn more ab…
View article: Code for manuscript: "Evidence for widespread woody plant use of water stored in bedrock."
Code for manuscript: "Evidence for widespread woody plant use of water stored in bedrock." Open
This release represents the code used in the accepted manuscript: McCormick, E., Dralle, D., Hahm, W., Tune, A., Schmidt, L., Chadwick, K. D., & Rempe, D. Evidence for widespread woody plant use of water stored in bedrock. Accepted: Nature…
View article: Evidence for widespread woody plant use of water stored in bedrock
Evidence for widespread woody plant use of water stored in bedrock Open
Woody plant transpiration is a major control on Earth’s climate system, streamflow, and human water supply. Soils are widely considered to be the primary reservoir of water for woody plants, however, plants also access water stored in the f…
View article: Quantifying Dynamic Water Storage in Unsaturated Bedrock with Borehole Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
Quantifying Dynamic Water Storage in Unsaturated Bedrock with Borehole Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Open
Quantifying the volume of water that is stored in the subsurface is critical to studies of water availability to ecosystems, slope stability, and water‐rock interactions. In a variety of settings, water is stored in fractured and weathered…
View article: Quantifying dynamic water storage in unsaturated bedrock with borehole nuclear magnetic resonance
Quantifying dynamic water storage in unsaturated bedrock with borehole nuclear magnetic resonance Open
Earth and Space Science Open Archive This work was has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters. Version of RecordESSOAr is a venue for early communication or feedback before peer review. Data may be preliminary. Learn…