Developing an urban canopy model for improved weather forecasts in cities

Lead Research Organisation: University of Reading
Department Name: Meteorology

Abstract

Most of the world's population now experiences an urban version of weather extremes and climate change. Accurate forecasting of weather and air quality in cities relies on correctly representing the physics of turbulent exchange between the surface and the overlying atmosphere. Each building produces a complex flow but by treating their effect collectively as an "urban canopy", relatively simple models can be formulated. The problem lies in understanding how urban heterogeneity affects flow processes: how does the heat flux change from tall vs small buildings? What if sun heats one side of the street and not the other? Does a single tall building dominate surface drag?

This project will explore flow processes around building arrays to inform development of an urban canopy model. The project would adapt a modelling approach1 developed for vegetation canopies to extend an urban canopy model2 to non-neutral stability regimes. Existing data (wind tunnel, CFD, field) would be used to test similarity of turbulent exchange processes. New wind tunnel experiments would be designed and conducted to investigate non-neutral flows for more realistic urban canopy morphologies.

This project has a CASE award from the UK Met Office. The current urban surface scheme (MORUSES) in the Unified Model is coupled to the model at a single level: effectively, the buildings are flat. Urban areas contain increasingly large buildings that can occupy a significant fraction of the boundary layer, for which a single, surface prediction is inadequate and ill-defined. A key part of the Met Office urban modelling strategy is thus to develop a vertically distributed scheme that captures momentum and scalar exchange throughout the depth of the urban canopy.

MORUSES3 was developed to represent urban canopy heat fluxes in a simplified way. The concept behind the scheme is based on a 2D street canyon, consisting of building wake and "non-wake" areas of the flow. The turbulent exchange scheme within MORUSES was developed for a neutral flow regime and validated using wind tunnel modelling of heat fluxes from street canyons4. Moving from a 2D to a 3D framework is a necessary step to modelling real urban areas.

Wind-tunnel experiments with heated buildings would be done at EnFlo at the University of Surrey. Model facets - streets, walls, roofs - would be heated and heat fluxes measured using fast response sensors. By heating the models to relatively low temperatures in moderate flows, heat acts as a passive scalar. The objective would be to explore the impact of different configurations (3D building layout, heating patterns) on turbulent exchange. This methodology was already used to study vegetation canopies and street canyons5. Heating the models to higher temperatures addresses the regime where heat is an active scalar6. Wind-tunnel inlet conditions can also be varied to simulate convective and stable boundary layers above the buildings.

1 Harman and Finnigan 2007 BLM
2 Coceal and Belcher 2004 QJRMS
3 Porson et al 2010 QJRMS
4 Barlow et al 2004 BLM
5 Nogueira-Neto, 2015 PhD (Reading)
6 Marucci and Carpentieri 2019 BandE

Publications

10 25 50

Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
NE/S007261/1 01/10/2019 30/09/2027
2435701 Studentship NE/S007261/1 01/10/2020 30/03/2024 George Gunn