Dispersive Fluxes Within and Over a Real Urban Canopy: A Large-Eddy Simulation Study

Large-eddy simulations (LES) are conducted to study the transport of momentum and passive scalar within and over a real urban canopy in the City of Boston, USA. This urban canopy is characterized by complex building layouts, densities and orientations with high-rise buildings. Special attention is g...

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Veröffentlicht in:Boundary-layer meteorology 2022-10, Vol.185 (1), p.93-128
Hauptverfasser: Akinlabi, Emmanuel, Maronga, Björn, Giometto, Marco G., Li, Dan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Large-eddy simulations (LES) are conducted to study the transport of momentum and passive scalar within and over a real urban canopy in the City of Boston, USA. This urban canopy is characterized by complex building layouts, densities and orientations with high-rise buildings. Special attention is given to the magnitude, variability and structure of dispersive momentum and scalar fluxes and their relative importance to turbulent momentum and scalar fluxes. We first evaluate the LES model by comparing the simulated flow statistics over an urban-like canopy to data reported in previous studies. In simulations over the considered real urban canopy, we observe that the dispersive momentum and scalar fluxes can be important beyond 2–5 times the mean building height, which is a commonly used definition for the urban roughness sublayer height. Above the mean building height where the dispersive fluxes become weakly dependent on the grid spacing, the dispersive momentum flux contributes about 10–15% to the sum of turbulent and dispersive momentum fluxes and does not decrease monotonically with increasing height. The dispersive momentum and scalar fluxes are sensitive to the time and spatial averaging. We further find that the constituents of dispersive fluxes are spatially heterogeneous and enhanced by the presence of high-rise buildings. This work suggests the need to parameterize both turbulent and dispersive fluxes over real urban canopies in mesoscale and large-scale models.
ISSN:0006-8314
1573-1472
DOI:10.1007/s10546-022-00725-6