Abstract
Microscale urban meteorological models have been widely used in interpreting atmospheric flow and thermal discomfort in urban environments, but most previous studies examined the urban flow and thermal environments for an idealized urban morphology with imposing neutral or homogeneous thermal forcing. This study has developed a new building-scale meteorological prediction system that extends the ability to predict microscale meteorological fields in real urban environments. A computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model has been developed based on the non-hydrostatic incompressible Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations with a standard k-ε turbulence model, and the microscale urban surface energy (MUSE) model was coupled with the CFD model to provide realistic surface thermal boundary conditions in real urban environments. It is driven by the large scale wind and temperature fields predicted by the Korean operational weather prediction model. The validation results of the new building-scale meteorological prediction system were presented against wind tunnel data and field measurements, showing its ability to predict in-canyon flows and thermal environments in association with spatiotemporal variations of surface temperatures in real urban environments. The effects of realistic surface heating on pedestrian level wind and thermal environments have been investigated through sensitivity simulations of different surface heating conditions in the highly built-up urban area. The results implied that the inclusion of surface thermal forcing is important in interpreting urban flow and thermal environment of the urban area, highlighting a realistic urban surface heating that should be considered in predicting building-scale meteorology over real urban environments.
Highlights
Rapid urbanization, which is projected that two-thirds of the world’s population would live in cities by 2050 [1], causes various environmental problems in association with unique micrometeorological states in urban areas (e.g., [2,3])
The new building-scale meteorological prediction system has been developed with coupling the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model and the microscale urban surface energy (MUSE) model to predict microscale atmospheric flow and thermal environments for real urban areas (Figure 1)
Microscale urban meteorological models have been widely used in interpreting urban flow and study, a new building-scale meteorological prediction system has been developed to extend the ability thermal discomfort mostly under idealized urban morphological and physical environments
Summary
Rapid urbanization, which is projected that two-thirds of the world’s population would live in cities by 2050 [1], causes various environmental problems in association with unique micrometeorological states in urban areas (e.g., [2,3]). Wind tunnel experiments have advantages in collecting high-density spatial data and in interpreting microscale flow and thermal structures because wind tunnel data are obtained from well-designed experimental setups in terms of ideal/real cities’ morphological structures and meteorological driving forcing (e.g., [4,6]) They have limitations in that the multiscale meteorological influences in the urban boundary layer (UBL) are not considered. Microscale meteorological models have been widely used in investigating atmospheric flow, dispersion, and thermal comfort conditions in urban environments, compensating for the limitations in the wind tunnel experiments and field measurements (e.g., [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]).
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