Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4443741 Atmospheric Environment 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

An urban field trial has been undertaken with the aim of assessing the performance of the boundary layer height (BLH) determination of two models: the Met Office Unified Model (UM) and a Gaussian-type plume model, ADMS. Pulsed Doppler lidar data were used to measure mixing layer height and cloud base heights for a variety of meteorological conditions over a 3 week period in July 2003. In this work, the daily growth and decay of the BLH from the lidar data and model simulations for 5 days are compared. The results show that although the UM can do a good job of reproducing the boundary layer growth, there are occasions where the BLH is overestimated by 30–100%. Within dispersion models it is the BLH that effectively limits the height to which pollution disperses, so these results have very important implications for pollution dispersion modelling. The results show that correct development of the boundary layer in the UM is critically dependant on morning cloud cover. The ADMS model is used routinely by local authorities in the UK for local air-quality forecasting. The ADMS model was run under three settings; an ‘urban’ roughness, a ‘rural’ roughness and a ‘transition’ roughness. In all cases, the ‘urban’ setting over estimated the BLH and is clearly a poor predictor of urban BLH. The ‘transition’ setting, which distinguishes between the meteorological data input site and the dispersion modelling site, gave the best results under the well mixed conditions of the trial.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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