Abstract
Wind is an important factor affecting outdoor thermal comfort in urban environment, but its turbulence characteristics at the pedestrian level and effects on convective heat transfer (hc) from a human body remain poorly understood. Previous studies were only conducted in wind tunnels with low turbulence intensity, small turbulence integral length scale, and fixed prevailing wind direction. To address this knowledge gap, this field study was conceived to monitor the pedestrian level wind in actual outdoor settings and to measure the hc of a thermal manikin at the same time. The results show that both longitudinal and lateral turbulence intensity significantly enhance whole body hc. It remains to be examined whether the small-scale wind direction variation can be included in the lateral turbulence intensity or vice versa. The integral length scale found at the two sites were larger than a typical manikin dimension, and the whole body hc peaked when these two scales were comparable. As the first major field study to quantify convection heat loss of a thermal manikin exposed to real-life urban boundary layer wind, it is demonstrated crucial to consider realistic turbulence characteristics in the field when evaluating hc over a human body for urban microclimate design.
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