Effects of trees on mean wind, turbulence and momentum exchange within and above a real urban environment

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_E9E6E0BB3379
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Effects of trees on mean wind, turbulence and momentum exchange within and above a real urban environment
Journal
Advances in Water Resources
Author(s)
Giometto Marco Giovanni, Christen Andreas, Egli Pascal Emanuel, Schmid Manuel, Tooke Rory, Coops Nicholas, Parlange Marc B.
ISSN
0309-1708 (Print)
1872-9657 (Online)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
28/06/2017
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
106
Pages
154-168
Language
english
Abstract
Large-eddy simulations (LES) are used to gain insight into the effects of trees on turbulence, aerodynamic parameters, and momentum transfer rates characterizing the atmosphere within and above a real urban canopy. Several areas are considered that are part of a neighborhood in the city of Vancouver, BC, Canada where a small fraction of trees are taller than buildings. In this area, eight years of continuous wind and turbulence measurements are available from a 30 m meteorological tower. Data from airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) are used to represent both buildings and vegetation at the LES resolution. In the LES algorithm, buildings are accounted through an immersed boundary method, whereas vegetation is parameterized via a location-specific leaf area density. LES are performed including and excluding vegetation from the considered urban areas, varying wind direction and leaf area density. Surface roughness lengths (z0) from both LES and tower measurements are sensitive to the parameter, where LAI is the leaf area index and is the frontal area fraction of buildings characterizing a given canopy. For instance, tower measurements predict a 19% seasonal increase in z0, slightly lower than the 27% increase featured by LES for the most representative canopy (leaves-off leaves-on ). Removing vegetation from such a canopy would cause a dramatic drop of approximately 50% in z0 when compared to the reference summer value. The momentum displacement height (d) from LES also consistently increases as increases, due in large part to the disproportionate amount of drag that the (few) relatively taller trees exert on the flow. LES and measurements both predict an increase in the ratio of turbulent to mean kinetic energy (TKE/MKE) at the tower sampling height going from winter to summer, and LES also show how including vegetation results in a more (positive) negatively skewed (horizontal) vertical velocity distribution – reflecting a more intermittent velocity field which favors sweep motions when compared to ejections. Within the urban canopy, the effects of trees are twofold: on one hand, they act as a direct momentum sink for the mean flow; on the other, they reduce downward turbulent transport of high-momentum fluid, significantly reducing the wind intensity at the heights where people live and buildings consume energy.
Keywords
Aerodynamic roughness, Roughness sublayer, Trees, Turbulence, Urban canopy, Urban forest, Vegetation, Wind
Create date
24/11/2017 20:49
Last modification date
06/07/2024 6:05
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