Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6536724 | Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2018 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
A two-dimensional analytical model for describing the mean flow behavior inside a vegetation canopy after a leading edge in neutral conditions was developed and tested by means of large eddy simulations (LES) employing the LES code PALM. The analytical model is developed for the region directly after the canopy edge, the adjustment region, where one-dimensional canopy models fail due to the sharp change in roughness. The derivation of this adjustment region model is based on an analytic solution of the two-dimensional Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes equation in neutral conditions for a canopy with constant plant area density (PAD). The main assumptions for solving the governing equations are separability of the velocity components concerning the spatial variables and the neglection of the Reynolds stress gradients. These two assumptions are verified by means of LES. To determine the emerging model parameters, a simultaneous fitting scheme was applied to the velocity and pressure data of a reference LES simulation. Furthermore a sensitivity analysis of the adjustment region model, equipped with the previously calculated parameters, was performed varying the three relevant length, the canopy height (h), the canopy length and the adjustment length (Lc), in additional LES. Even if the model parameters are, in general, functions of h/Lc, it was found out that the model is capable of predicting the flow quantities in various cases, when using constant parameters. Subsequently the adjustment region model is combined with the one-dimensional model of Massman [Bound. Layer Meteorol., 83(3):407-421, 1997], which is applicable for the interior of the canopy, to attain an analytical model capable of describing the mean flow for the full canopy domain. Finally the model is tested against an analytical model based on a linearization approach.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Konstantin Kröniger, Tirtha Banerjee, Frederik De Roo, Matthias Mauder,