Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, China

Abstract To protect heritage buildings better, a method exploiting computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was developed for the analysis of wind erosion at a heritage site. Over a two-year period, we collected measurements of hourly weather data at Xinbin County to obtain statistics of wind speeds and d...

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Main Authors: Xiaoyu Wang, Jinzhu Meng, Tianwei Zhu, Jingyu Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-12-01
Series:Built Heritage
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/BF03545718
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spelling doaj-f8e49c9e9bd641ed84d26959e5d9d0fb2020-12-20T12:22:13ZengSpringerOpenBuilt Heritage2096-30412662-68022019-12-0134415710.1186/BF03545718Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, ChinaXiaoyu Wang0Jinzhu Meng1Tianwei Zhu2Jingyu Zhang3School of Architecture & Civil Engineering, Shenyang University of TechnologySchool of Architecture & Civil Engineering, Shenyang University of TechnologySchool of Architecture & Civil Engineering, Shenyang University of TechnologySchool of Architecture & Civil Engineering, Shenyang University of TechnologyAbstract To protect heritage buildings better, a method exploiting computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was developed for the analysis of wind erosion at a heritage site. Over a two-year period, we collected measurements of hourly weather data at Xinbin County to obtain statistics of wind speeds and directions for the Yongling Mausoleum. Subsequent results from CFD simulations show that before greening, with wind speeds reaching 10 m/s, certain structures (southwest-facing corners, doors and windows on open sides, places where swirling winds develop, and eaves of sloping roofs) of four heritage buildings were eroded more severely. With appropriate greening, plants may exert their unique ecological presence to better protect heritage buildings and their historical environments. After greening, the severity of damage to these vulnerable structures by wind was reduced. With wind speeds reaching 10 m/s, the average pressure on the structures of each building was 0.41–27.85 Pa, representing a reduction of 2.4%–75.6% from pressures before greening. We also constructed a 1:500-scale model to verify in experiments the correctness of CFD simulation qualitatively. The CFD simulations were found to provide an effective method to investigate and predict wind erosion of the heritage site.https://doi.org/10.1186/BF03545718computational fluid dynamics (CFD)numerical simulationwind erosiongreening planheritage conservation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xiaoyu Wang
Jinzhu Meng
Tianwei Zhu
Jingyu Zhang
spellingShingle Xiaoyu Wang
Jinzhu Meng
Tianwei Zhu
Jingyu Zhang
Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, China
Built Heritage
computational fluid dynamics (CFD)
numerical simulation
wind erosion
greening plan
heritage conservation
author_facet Xiaoyu Wang
Jinzhu Meng
Tianwei Zhu
Jingyu Zhang
author_sort Xiaoyu Wang
title Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, China
title_short Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, China
title_full Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, China
title_fullStr Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, China
title_full_unstemmed Prediction of Wind Erosion over a Heritage Site: A Case Study of Yongling Mausoleum, China
title_sort prediction of wind erosion over a heritage site: a case study of yongling mausoleum, china
publisher SpringerOpen
series Built Heritage
issn 2096-3041
2662-6802
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Abstract To protect heritage buildings better, a method exploiting computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was developed for the analysis of wind erosion at a heritage site. Over a two-year period, we collected measurements of hourly weather data at Xinbin County to obtain statistics of wind speeds and directions for the Yongling Mausoleum. Subsequent results from CFD simulations show that before greening, with wind speeds reaching 10 m/s, certain structures (southwest-facing corners, doors and windows on open sides, places where swirling winds develop, and eaves of sloping roofs) of four heritage buildings were eroded more severely. With appropriate greening, plants may exert their unique ecological presence to better protect heritage buildings and their historical environments. After greening, the severity of damage to these vulnerable structures by wind was reduced. With wind speeds reaching 10 m/s, the average pressure on the structures of each building was 0.41–27.85 Pa, representing a reduction of 2.4%–75.6% from pressures before greening. We also constructed a 1:500-scale model to verify in experiments the correctness of CFD simulation qualitatively. The CFD simulations were found to provide an effective method to investigate and predict wind erosion of the heritage site.
topic computational fluid dynamics (CFD)
numerical simulation
wind erosion
greening plan
heritage conservation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/BF03545718
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