Content area

Abstract

The statistics of turbulent flow across a forest edge have been examined using large-eddy simulation, and results compared with field and wind-tunnel observations. The moorland-to-forest transition is characterized by flow deceleration in the streamwise direction, upward distortion of the mean flow, formation of a high pressure zone immediately in front of the edge, suppression of the standard deviations and covariance of velocity components, and enhancement of velocity skewnesses. For the selected forest density, it is observed that the maximum distortion angle is about 8 degrees from the horizontal. Instead of approaching a downwind equilibrium state in a monotonic manner, turbulence (standard deviations and covariances of velocity components) and mean streamwise velocity undershoot in the transition zone behind the edge. Evolution of flow statistics clearly reveals the growth of an internal boundary layer, and the establishment of an equilibrium layer downwind of the edge. It is evident that lower-order moments generally adjust more quickly over the new rough surface than do higher-order moments. We also show that the streamwise velocity standard deviation at canopy height starts its recovery over the rough surface sooner than does the vertical velocity standard deviation, but completes full adjustment later than the latter. Despite the limited domain size upstream of the edge, large-eddy simulation has successfully reproduced turbulent statistics in good agreement with field and wind-tunnel measurements.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Large-eddy Simulation of Turbulent Flow Across a Forest Edge. Part I: Flow Statistics
Author
Yang, Bai; Raupach, Michael R; Shaw, Roger H; U, Kyaw Tha; Paw; Morse, Andrew P
Pages
377-412
Publication year
2006
Publication date
Sep 2006
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
00068314
e-ISSN
15731472
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
737539886
Copyright
Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 2006