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Passive urban ventilation by combined buoyancy-driven slope flow and wall flow: Parametric CFD studies on idealized city models

Luo, Zhiwen ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2082-3958 and Li, Yuguo 2011. Passive urban ventilation by combined buoyancy-driven slope flow and wall flow: Parametric CFD studies on idealized city models. Atmospheric Environment 45 (32) , pp. 5946-5956. 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2011.04.010

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Abstract

This paper reports the results of a parametric CFD study on idealized city models to investigate the potential of slope flow in ventilating a city located in a mountainous region when the background synoptic wind is absent. Examples of such a city include Tokyo in Japan, Los Angeles and Phoenix in the US, and Hong Kong. Two types of buoyancy-driven flow are considered, i.e., slope flow from the mountain slope (katabatic wind at night and anabatic wind in the daytime), and wall flow due to heated/cooled urban surfaces. The combined buoyancy-driven flow system can serve the purpose of dispersing the accumulated urban air pollutants when the background wind is weak or absent. The microscopic picture of ventilation performance within the urban structures was evaluated in terms of air change rate (ACH) and age of air. The simulation results reveal that the slope flow plays an important role in ventilating the urban area, especially in calm conditions. Katabatic flow at night is conducive to mitigating the nocturnal urban heat island. In the present parametric study, the mountain slope angle and mountain height are assumed to be constant, and the changing variables are heating/cooling intensity and building height. For a typical mountain of 500 m inclined at an angle of 20° to the horizontal level, the interactive structure is very much dependent on the ratio of heating/cooling intensity as well as building height. When the building is lower than 60 m, the slope wind dominates. When the building is as high as 100 m, the contribution from the urban wall flow cannot be ignored. It is found that katabatic wind can be very beneficial to the thermal environment as well as air quality at the pedestrian level. The air change rate for the pedestrian volume can be as high as 300 ACH. Highlights ► Parametric CFD is used to study the effect of slope flow on city ventilation. ► The katabatic flow is conducive to mitigate the urban heat island. ► In our simulation, when the building is lower than 60 m, the slope wind dominates. ► When the building is as high as 100 m, the urban wall flow is important. ► The pedestrian air change rate can be as high as 300 ACH.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Architecture
Publisher: Elsevier
ISSN: 1352-2310
Date of Acceptance: 4 April 2011
Last Modified: 10 Nov 2022 11:46
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/151768

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