CFD Analysis of the Impact of Building Layout and Morphology on Pedestrian-Level Airflow and Pollutant Stagnation in Urban Areas with Well-Developed Surface Boundary Layers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. CFD Analysis Overview
2.1. Analysis of Cases and Targets
2.2. Analysis Conditions and Boundary Conditions
3. Estimation of Ventilation Volumes and PFR Based on Wind Flow and Interfaces
4. Model Validation
Validation of the Flow Field in Urban Street Canyon
5. CFD Analysis Results
5.1. Wind Velocity Distribution of Target Areas
Wind Velocity U1 and │U│
5.2. Distribution of Turbulence Energy k
5.3. Mean Temperature/Concentration Profiles on a Horizontal Plane
5.3.1. Mean Temperature (T) Profiles on a Horizontal Plane
5.3.2. Vertical Cross-Section of Concentrations (C)
5.3.3. Mean Concentration (C) Profiles on a Horizontal Plane
5.4. Comparison and Evaluation of Ventilation Efficiency in the Target Area
6. Conclusions
- In the calculation without considering atmospheric stability, the mean wind velocity on a horizontal plane within the street canyon space had high values for the grid-pattern arrangement of mid-rise buildings; however, near the ground (the section below the height of around 0.5 H), the case with buildings of varying heights showed the highest value. Additionally, when building heights were set to be high even in the same grid-pattern arrangement, the wind velocity decreased within the canyon space. The wind velocity above the canyon space significantly decreased in the presence of buildings with uneven heights and high-rise buildings.
- In the calculation considering atmospheric stability, cases showed little difference in the mean wind velocity on a horizontal plane in the section below the height of 1.0 H. This indicates that, from the perspective of wind ventilation at the pedestrian level, atmospheric stability has little effect on ventilation improvement.
- In the calculation without considering atmospheric stability, pollutant concentrations were higher in the staggered arrangement of middle-rise buildings (1.0 H) and in the grid-pattern arrangement of high-rise buildings (1.5 H) than in the grid-pattern arrangement of middle-rise buildings (1.0 H). The case with uneven building heights (0.5 H and 1.5 H) showed the lowest concentration. This is due to the higher wind turbulence caused by uneven building heights, which promotes the diffusion of pollutants upwards. However, it is assumed that high-rise buildings (1.5 H), with uniform heights and grid-pattern arrangements, have higher pollutant concentrations than middle-rise buildings (0.5 H). This is because the turbulence energy is smaller in the section below the height of the buildings, leading to less diffusion into the air.
- In calculations involving atmospheric stability, since pollutant concentrations are closely linked to turbulence energy, concentrations tend to be lower in unstable conditions with high turbulence energy and higher in stable conditions. This indicates that atmospheric stability does not have a significant effect within the canyon space in terms of wind ventilation; however, it does impact the diffusion of pollutant concentrations.
- In the calculation without considering atmospheric stability, interface-based ventilation volumes per unit surface area based on interfaces and PFR per unit surface area were found to be the most effective for buildings with irregular heights and the least effective for high-rise buildings in a grid-pattern arrangement.
- In the calculation considering atmospheric stability, the ventilation volumes per unit surface area and PFR per unit surface area were smallest in the case of atmospheric stability and largest in the case of atmospheric instability.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Xi | i = 1 (mainstream direction), i = 2 (span direction), i = 3 (vertical direction) |
Ui | Mean wind velocity (ms−1) |
ε | Turbulent dissipation rate (m2/s3) |
k | Turbulence energy (m2/s2) |
ρ | Air density (kg/m3) |
P | Pressure (N/m2) |
νt | Kinematic eddy viscosity (m2/s) |
l | Turbulent length scale (m) |
Co | Generation term of contaminants ((μg/m3)/s) |
C | Mean concentration of contaminants ((kg/m3)/s) |
g | Acceleration of gravity (−9.8 (m/s2)) |
TH | Temperature at a building’s height (K) |
TS | Ground surface and building surface temperatures in the target area (K) |
H | Building height (m) |
T | Air temperature (K) |
UH | Wind velocity at a building’s height (ms−1) |
β | Volume expansion rate of air (approximately 1/303) |
δij | Kronecker delta |
Pk | Production term of k by the mean flow (m2/s3) |
Gk | Production term of k by buoyancy (m2/s3) |
Φ | Scalar value at each point (concentration, C, and temperature, T) |
Rb | Bulk Richardson Number; Rb = gH(TH − TS)/{T + 273) (UH)2} |
ΔT | T − TH |
Appendix A
a. Continuity equation | |
b. Transport equation of mean flows | |
c. Turbulence energy (k) transport equation | d. Turbulence energy dissipation (ε) transport equation |
e. Formula of coefficient of virtual viscosity | f. Production term of turbulence energy k |
g. k production term by buoyancy | h. Scalar (Φ: concentration, C, temperature, T) transport equation |
where σ1 = 1.0, σ2 = 1.3, σ3 = 1.0 | |
Cμ = 0.09, C1 = 1.44, C2 = 1.92, C3 = C1 (GK > 0) or C3 = 0 (GK ≤ 0) |
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Case | Size of Buildings (X × Y × Z) (m) | Mesh Split of Analysis Domains (X × Y × Z) (m) | Floor Area Ratio (%) | Building Coverage Ratio (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Case 1 | Middle-rise buildings (1.0 H × 1.0 H × 1.0 H) | 32 × 32 × 45 | 125 | 25 |
Case 2 | Middle-rise buildings (1.0 H × 1.0 H × 1.0 H) | 44 × 44 × 45 | ||
Case 3 | High-rise buildings (1.0 H × 1.0 H × 1.5 H) | 62 × 62 × 45 | ||
Low-rise buildings (1.0 H × 1.0 H × 0.5 H) | ||||
Case 4 | High-rise buildings (0.816 H × 0.816 H × 1.5 H) | 34 × 34 × 45 | 16.64 | |
Case 5, 6, 7 | Middle-rise buildings (1.0 H × 1.0 H × 1.0 H) | 32 × 32 × 45 | 25 |
Items | Wind Velocity | k | ε | Concentration | Temperature | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sky | Free slip | |||||
, U3 = 0 | C = 0 | T = 30 (°C) | ||||
Side | Symmetry | |||||
Inlet | Cyclic ((Δp/Δx) 0.008/30 (Pa/m)) | Cyclic | ||||
Outlet | ||||||
Ground surface | Z0 Log low (Z0 = 0.01 (m)) | (stable) (weakly unstable) (unstable) | T = 29 (°C) T = 35 (°C) T = 40 (°C) | |||
Build. Surface |
Case | Atmospheric Stability | Air Temperature T (°C) | Surface Temperature Ts (°C) | Rb |
---|---|---|---|---|
Case 1 | Neutral | 30 | 30 | 0.0000 |
Case 5 | Stable | 30 | 29 | 0.0444 |
Case 6 | Weakly unstable | 30 | 35 | −0.3171 |
Case 7 | Unstable | 30 | 40 | −0.6511 |
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Byoungchull, O.; Beungyong, P. CFD Analysis of the Impact of Building Layout and Morphology on Pedestrian-Level Airflow and Pollutant Stagnation in Urban Areas with Well-Developed Surface Boundary Layers. Sustainability 2024, 16, 5745. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135745
Byoungchull O, Beungyong P. CFD Analysis of the Impact of Building Layout and Morphology on Pedestrian-Level Airflow and Pollutant Stagnation in Urban Areas with Well-Developed Surface Boundary Layers. Sustainability. 2024; 16(13):5745. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135745
Chicago/Turabian StyleByoungchull, Oh, and Park Beungyong. 2024. "CFD Analysis of the Impact of Building Layout and Morphology on Pedestrian-Level Airflow and Pollutant Stagnation in Urban Areas with Well-Developed Surface Boundary Layers" Sustainability 16, no. 13: 5745. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16135745