scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Direct measurements of the drag force over aligned arrays of cubes exposed to boundary-layer flows

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, wind tunnel measurements of the total drag force for aligned arrays of cubes exposed to two different boundary-layer flows at three flow velocities are discussed, and a new adjustment length scale is proposed for better parameterization of urban effects in dispersion models.
Abstract
Wind tunnel measurements of the total drag force for aligned arrays of cubes exposed to two different boundary-layer flows at three flow velocities are discussed. The drag force for eight different building packing densities λ p (from 0.028 to 1) is measured with a standard load cell generating a novel dataset. Different λ p are reproduced by increasing the number of buildings on the same lot area; this represents a real situation that an urban planner is faced with when a lot area of a given (fixed) size is allocated to the development of new built areas. It is assumed that the surrounding terrain is uniform and there is a transition from a given roughness (smooth) to a new roughness (rough). The approaching flow will adjust itself over the new surface within a distance that in general may be larger than the horizontal length covered by the array. We investigate the region where the flow adjustment occurs. The wide range of packing densities allowed us to analyse in detail the evolution of the drag force. The drag force increases with increasing packing densities until it reaches a maximum at an intermediate packing density (λ p  = 0.25 in our case) followed by a slight decrease at larger packing densities. The value of the drag force depends on the flow adjustment along the array which is evaluated by introducing the parameter “drag area” to retrieve information about the drag distribution at different λ p . Results clearly suggest a change of the distribution of the drag force, which is found to be relatively uniform at low packing densities, while most of the force acts on first rows of the arrays at large packing densities. The drag area constitutes the basis for the formulation of a new adjustment length scale defined as the ratio between the volume of the air within the array and the drag area. The proposed adjustment length scale automatically takes into account the change in drag distribution along the array for a better parameterization of urban effects in dispersion models.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The impacts of building height variations and building packing densities on flow adjustment and city breathability in idealized urban models

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of building height variations (six height standard deviations σ H ǫ = 0% −77.8%) associated to building packing densities was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Impact of Green Space Layouts on Microclimate and Air Quality in Residential Districts of Nanjing, China

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of different vegetation types and layouts on microclimate and air quality in residential districts based on the morphology and green layout of Nanjing, China was numerically investigated, and the relationship vegetation-microclimate-air quality should be analyzed taking into account not only the total area covered by vegetation but also its layout and degree of aggregation.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Investigation of the Quantitative Correlation between Urban Morphology Parameters and Outdoor Ventilation Efficiency Indices

TL;DR: In this paper, two urban morphology parameters, i.e., the floor area ratio (FAR) and the building site coverage (BSC), are investigated to investigate their quantitative correlation with urban ventilation indices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of morphological parameters on urban ventilation in compact cities: The case of the Tuscolano-Don Bosco district in Rome.

TL;DR: In this article, 3D steadystate Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes simulations are performed to analyze the impact of morphological parameters (MP) on the urban ventilation, which shows a considerable worsening of urban ventilation with increasing building density with a reduction in the mean wind velocity up to 62% experienced at the pedestrian level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of morphological parameters on urban ventilation in compact cities: The case of the Tuscolano-Don Bosco district in Rome

TL;DR: In this article , 3D steadystate Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes simulations are performed to analyze the impact of morphological parameters (MP) on the urban ventilation, which shows a considerable worsening of urban ventilation with increasing building density with a reduction in the mean wind velocity up to 62% experienced at the pedestrian level.
References
More filters
Book

Boundary layer theory

TL;DR: The flow laws of the actual flows at high Reynolds numbers differ considerably from those of the laminar flows treated in the preceding part, denoted as turbulence as discussed by the authors, and the actual flow is very different from that of the Poiseuille flow.
Book

An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics

TL;DR: The dynamique des : fluides Reference Record created on 2005-11-18 is updated on 2016-08-08 and shows improvements in the quality of the data over the past decade.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics. By G. K. Batchelor. Pp. 615. 75s. (Cambridge.)

TL;DR: In this paper, the Navier-Stokes equation is derived for an inviscid fluid, and a finite difference method is proposed to solve the Euler's equations for a fluid flow in 3D space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Street design and urban canopy layer climate

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the results of recent urban canyon field studies and of scale and mathematical modelling to find a range of canyon geometries that are compatible with the apparently conflicting design objectives of mid-latitude cities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aerodynamic Properties of Urban Areas Derived from Analysis of Surface Form

TL;DR: In this paper, several methods to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of a site through analysis of its surface form (morphometry) are considered in relation to cities, including zero-plane displacement length (zd), roughness length(z0), depth of the roughness sublayer, and aerodynamic conductance.
Related Papers (5)