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Three-Dimensional Modeling of Air Flow and Pollutant Dispersion in an Urban Street Canyon with Thermal Effects
Effects of excess ground and building temperatures on airflow and dispersion of pollutants in an urban street canyon with an aspect ratio of 0.8 and a length-to-width ratio of 3 were investigated numerically. Three-dimensional governing equations of mass, momentum, energy, and species were modeled using the RNG k-ϵ turbulence model and Boussinesq approximation, which were solved using the flnite volume method. Vehicle emissions were estimated from the measured trafflc flow rates and modeled as banded line sources, with a street length and bandwidths equal to typical vehicle widths. Both measurements and simulations reveal that pollutant concentrations typically follow the trafflc flow rate; they decline as the height increases and are higher on the leeward side than on the windward side. Three-dimensional simulations reveal that the vortex line, joining the centers of cross-sectional vortexes of the street canyon, meanders between street buildings and shifts toward the windward side when heating strength is increased. Thermal boundary layers are very thin. Entrainment of outside air increases, and pollutant concentration decreases with increasing heating condition. Also, trafflc-produced turbulence enhances the turbulent kinetic energy and the mixing of temperature and admixtures in the canyon. Factors affecting the inaccuracy of the simulations are addressed.
Three-Dimensional Modeling of Air Flow and Pollutant Dispersion in an Urban Street Canyon with Thermal Effects
Effects of excess ground and building temperatures on airflow and dispersion of pollutants in an urban street canyon with an aspect ratio of 0.8 and a length-to-width ratio of 3 were investigated numerically. Three-dimensional governing equations of mass, momentum, energy, and species were modeled using the RNG k-ϵ turbulence model and Boussinesq approximation, which were solved using the flnite volume method. Vehicle emissions were estimated from the measured trafflc flow rates and modeled as banded line sources, with a street length and bandwidths equal to typical vehicle widths. Both measurements and simulations reveal that pollutant concentrations typically follow the trafflc flow rate; they decline as the height increases and are higher on the leeward side than on the windward side. Three-dimensional simulations reveal that the vortex line, joining the centers of cross-sectional vortexes of the street canyon, meanders between street buildings and shifts toward the windward side when heating strength is increased. Thermal boundary layers are very thin. Entrainment of outside air increases, and pollutant concentration decreases with increasing heating condition. Also, trafflc-produced turbulence enhances the turbulent kinetic energy and the mixing of temperature and admixtures in the canyon. Factors affecting the inaccuracy of the simulations are addressed.
Three-Dimensional Modeling of Air Flow and Pollutant Dispersion in an Urban Street Canyon with Thermal Effects
Tsai, Mong-Yu (author) / Chen, Kang-Shin (author) / Wu, Chung-Hsing (author)
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association ; 55 ; 1178-1189
2005-08-01
12 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
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