Abstract

Abstract The heterogeneously heated free convective boundary layer (CBL) is investigated by means of dimensional analysis and results from large-eddy simulations (LES) and direct numerical simulations (DNS). The investigated physical model is a CBL that forms in a linearly stratified atmosphere heated from the surface by square patches with a high surface buoyancy flux. Each simulation has been run long enough to show the formation of a peak in kinetic energy, corresponding to the “optimal” heterogeneity size with strong secondary circulations, and the subsequent transition into a horizontally homogeneous CBL. Scaling laws for the time of the optimal state and transition and for the vertically integrated kinetic energy (KE) have been developed. The laws show that the optimal state and transition do not occur at a fixed ratio of the heterogeneity size to the CBL height. Instead, these occur at a higher ratio for simulations with increasing heterogeneity sizes because of the development of structures in the downward-moving air that grow faster than the CBL thickness. The moment of occurrence of the optimal state and transition are strongly related to the heterogeneity amplitude: stronger amplitudes result in an earlier optimal state and a later transition. Furthermore, a decrease in patch size combined with a compensating increase in patch surface buoyancy flux to maintain the energy input results in decreasing KE and a later transition. The simulations suggest that a CBL with a heterogeneity size smaller than the initial CBL height has less entrainment than a horizontally homogeneous CBL, whereas one with a larger heterogeneity size has more.

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