Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platform

Urban wind fields are of concern because the near-ground wind vector drives the ventilation of cities, which involves, among other things, the translocation and dilution of air pollutants. To study flow patterns in the urban atmospheric boundary layer, turbulence-resolving tools are needed since num...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bastian Paas, Timo Zimmermann, Otto Klemm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Borntraeger 2021-03-01
Series:Meteorologische Zeitschrift
Subjects:
les
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/metz/2020/1006
id doaj-6d3949a46107413f98b262b3e12d2814
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6d3949a46107413f98b262b3e12d28142021-06-16T14:47:25ZengBorntraegerMeteorologische Zeitschrift0941-29482021-03-01301455710.1127/metz/2020/100693256Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platformBastian PaasTimo ZimmermannOtto KlemmUrban wind fields are of concern because the near-ground wind vector drives the ventilation of cities, which involves, among other things, the translocation and dilution of air pollutants. To study flow patterns in the urban atmospheric boundary layer, turbulence-resolving tools are needed since numerous roughness elements are present that cause the flow to be of highly turbulent nature. Therefore, we developed a mobile, fast-response measurement platform that is situated on a cargo bicycle. This mobile platform was deployed in a case study collecting data at street level within a complex, urban area that includes street canyons, open squares, street intersections as well as courtyard entrances. Results were compared to numerical large eddy simulation (LES) data from the model PALM. Outcomes of both methods were qualitatively analyzed; results show that both methods were able to identify complex flow patterns, including small-scale structures such as jetting flows, vortices, recirculation areas, and a convergence zone where air masses collide. Results of both methods generally matched well, even for areas that featured highly complex, three-dimensional flow structures. We conclude that both the model PALM and the mobile platform are valuable tools for gathering insights about complex flow structures in real-world environments.http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/metz/2020/1006palmpalm‑4ulesturbulenceurban applicationmobile measurementscargo bicycleatmospheric boundary layerventilation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bastian Paas
Timo Zimmermann
Otto Klemm
spellingShingle Bastian Paas
Timo Zimmermann
Otto Klemm
Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platform
Meteorologische Zeitschrift
palm
palm‑4u
les
turbulence
urban application
mobile measurements
cargo bicycle
atmospheric boundary layer
ventilation
author_facet Bastian Paas
Timo Zimmermann
Otto Klemm
author_sort Bastian Paas
title Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platform
title_short Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platform
title_full Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platform
title_fullStr Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platform
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: Good agreement between LES model results and data from a mobile platform
title_sort analysis of a turbulent wind field in a street canyon: good agreement between les model results and data from a mobile platform
publisher Borntraeger
series Meteorologische Zeitschrift
issn 0941-2948
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Urban wind fields are of concern because the near-ground wind vector drives the ventilation of cities, which involves, among other things, the translocation and dilution of air pollutants. To study flow patterns in the urban atmospheric boundary layer, turbulence-resolving tools are needed since numerous roughness elements are present that cause the flow to be of highly turbulent nature. Therefore, we developed a mobile, fast-response measurement platform that is situated on a cargo bicycle. This mobile platform was deployed in a case study collecting data at street level within a complex, urban area that includes street canyons, open squares, street intersections as well as courtyard entrances. Results were compared to numerical large eddy simulation (LES) data from the model PALM. Outcomes of both methods were qualitatively analyzed; results show that both methods were able to identify complex flow patterns, including small-scale structures such as jetting flows, vortices, recirculation areas, and a convergence zone where air masses collide. Results of both methods generally matched well, even for areas that featured highly complex, three-dimensional flow structures. We conclude that both the model PALM and the mobile platform are valuable tools for gathering insights about complex flow structures in real-world environments.
topic palm
palm‑4u
les
turbulence
urban application
mobile measurements
cargo bicycle
atmospheric boundary layer
ventilation
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/metz/2020/1006
work_keys_str_mv AT bastianpaas analysisofaturbulentwindfieldinastreetcanyongoodagreementbetweenlesmodelresultsanddatafromamobileplatform
AT timozimmermann analysisofaturbulentwindfieldinastreetcanyongoodagreementbetweenlesmodelresultsanddatafromamobileplatform
AT ottoklemm analysisofaturbulentwindfieldinastreetcanyongoodagreementbetweenlesmodelresultsanddatafromamobileplatform
_version_ 1721374963924992000