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Understanding the urban roughness sublayer using boundary layer wind and turbulence models, with applications to canopy drag and scalar exchange. Explores deviations from Monin-Obukhov similarity theory, key concepts in urban morphology, and turbulence properties in the urban environment. Investigates wind profiles, coherent eddies, and mixing length scales.
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Measurements and models of the urban roughness sublayer Janet Barlow Department of Meteorology University of Reading, UK Co-workers: Omduth Coceal (Reading) John Finnigan, Ian Harman (CSIRO, Australia) Esben Almkvist (Sweden), Manabu Kanda, Ken-Ichi Narita (Japan) Funds from The Met Office, CSIRO, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Urban boundary layer windspeed potential temperature z zi~1km mixed layer ~0.1zi surface layer inertial sublayer ~2-5h roughness sublayer z/L – stability parameter z0 – roughness length d – displacement height u* – friction velocity Surface layer wind profile (Monin Obukhov similarity theory MOST)
Urban roughness sublayer properties • Wind profile deviates from surface layer form MOST does not apply • Inflection point in wind profile • shear instability causes eddies • Flow is highly turbulent • effective dispersion of pollution • Turbulence is efficent, and intermittent • coherent eddies generated at top of buildings (?) Results from BUBBLE campaign, Christen (2005)
Urban morphology Planar area index Frontal area index Square array Staggered array LES, Kanda (2006)
Summary • Flow in urban roughness sublayer deviates from MOST • Turbulence transfers momentum efficiently • Large coherent turbulent structures generated within canopy • Barlow, J.F. and Coceal, O. (2008) A review of urban roughness sublayer turbulence, report for Met Office Today Part 1: momentum exchange and wind profiles Testing a vegetation canopy model Part 2: scalar exchange and temperature profiles Experiments to determine temperature near walls
Part 1: momentum exchange and wind profiles March 2008 at CSIRO, Canberra, working with John Finnigan and Ian Harman
U Simple canopy RSL model (Harman and Finnigan 2007) • Homogeneous, dense canopy • Drag force Fd= U2/Lc with Lc = 1/(Cda) • Lc: canopy drag lengthscale a: leaf area index • Use mixing length model for stress term • At steady state Thanks to Ian Harman for slide material
z/H 1 U Single lengthscale to represent canopy mixing • Assume that MOST holds above canopy • BUT need additional lengthscale to represent canopy mixing • Raupach et al. 1996: Mixing layer analogy for vegetation canopies ΛX ω~ U/(dU/dz)|H ΛX = 8.1 ω • Generalise MOST to include canopy mixing
New roughness sublayer function • Assume that changes in scale on δω • c1 = f (β, k, lm) • c2: relates z to δω • Influence of RSL decays over depth • Calculate entire wind profile • from β and LC
Testing model with urban “canopy” data • Wind tunnel data (Cheng and Castro, 2002) • Staggered array of cubes • H=20mm, λF = 0.25 • Laser Doppler Anemometry (LDA) at blue locations
Testing model with urban data • Direct numerical simulation (DNS) data (Coceal et al., 2007) • Staggered array of cubes • λF = 0.25 • 16h x 12h x 8h domain • grid size h/32 Snapshot of (u,w) velocity plane
Compare LDA and DNS Reynolds stress Derive β= u*/Uh from data u* not easy to define! Large dU/dz at z = h
Compare LDA and DNS windspeed Derive Lc/h from exponential fit to within-canopy winds NB: Lc/h depends on β
Compare LDA and HF07 model Coceal and Belcher (2004) Canopy drag lengthscale:
Compare DNS and HF07 model Reformulate model for pressure gradient driven flow?
Verdict: • Significant differences between data and model – magnitude and form of windspeed profile BUT broad features captured • Q: Is urban canopy turbulence proportional to a single lengthscale? • A: maybe not! • BUBBLE campaign data • Profile in a street canyon, 1 year • Turbulence is strongly anisotropic • Next step: test model with BUBBLE data Thanks to Andreas Christen, UBC
Part 2: scalar exchange and temperature profiles October 2007 in Japan, working with Manabu Kanda, Ken-Ichi Narita and Esben Almkvist
Ub FX WT2 A WT1 Street canyon model • In-street flow = recirculation + ventilated region • Bulk aerodynamic form for fluxes • Flow and surface roughness determine wT1 for flux from the surface to A across thermal internal boundary layer (TIBL) • Transfer velocity wT2 across shear layer from A • Parameterise depth of TIBL = 0.1H Harman, Barlow and Belcher (2004), Boundary-Layer Meteorol., 113, 387-409
Thermal internal boundary layers Use law of the wall e.g. CHENSI (Sini et al. 1996): Validate against wind tunnel heated cube data ATREUS project K. Richards @ Hamburg expt S. Vardoulakis simulations
Thermal internal boundary layers • Full scale thermal boundary layers • - Louka et al. 2001 • Balloons released near wall in Nantes ‘99 expt • very thin BL! Q: What is the form of the TIBL for an urban surface at high Reynolds number?
COSMO site, Japan • Concrete cubes (c. 10cm shell), concrete base • H = 1.5m • Scale 1:5 • λF = 0.25 • new sonic anemometer developed, head size 5cm (cf. 20cm)
Experimental set-up • south east side of cube within array • No direct sun • array of thermocouples: • x: logarithmically spaced 0 to 25 cm • z: 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 0.8, 1.0H • Sampling rate: 0.5Hz for 2 months (!) • Also: sonic anemometers, surface energy balance Thanks to Esben Almkvist, Ken-Ichi Narita, Manabu Kanda
Temperature field • NB: x axis is x0.5 • 24th Nov 2007 • Midday 12:34 • Midnight 00:26 • Flow around cubes • s
Verdict (so far): • Thermal boundary layer thin (<1.5cm mostly) by day, thicker at night. • cf. HBB04, estimate depth = 0.1H = 15cm… • Next step: • check windspeed and direction; derive transfer coefficients
Conclusions • Urban roughness sublayer resembles vegetation RSL in SOME respects • Vegetation RSL model captures SOME of flow characteristics • Research needed to formulate general model of turbulence • aim for similar, SIMPLE urban RSL model • Scalar exchange with urban surfaces hard to observe and simulate • Next step: test HF scalar RSL model against data j.f.barlow@reading.ac.uk