Surface heating in relation to air temperature, wind and turbulence in an urban street canyon

被引:104
作者
Offerle, B.
Eliasson, I.
Grimmond, C. S. B.
Holmer, B.
机构
[1] Ctr Earth Sci, Urban Climate Grp, SE-40530 Gothenburg, Sweden
[2] Indiana Univ, Dept Geog, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
[3] Kings Coll London, Environm Monitoring & Modelling Grp, London WC2R 2LS, England
关键词
Buoyancy; heat flux; surface temperature; urban canyon; wind field;
D O I
10.1007/s10546-006-9099-8
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Wind and temperature measurements from within and above a deep urban canyon (height/width = 2.1) were used to examine the thermal structure of air within the canyon, exchange of heat with the overlying atmosphere, and the possible impacts of surface heating on within-canyon air flow. Measurements were made over a range of seasons and primarily analysed for sunny days. This allowed the study of temperature differences between opposing canyon walls and between wall and air of more than 15 degrees C in summer. The wall temperature patterns follow those of incoming solar radiation loading with a secondary daytime effect from the longwave exchange between the walls. In winter, the canyon walls receive little direct solar radiation, and temperature differences are largely due to anthropogenic heating of the building interiors. Cool air from aloft and heated air from canyon walls is shown to circulate within the canyon under cross-canyon flow. Roofs and some portions of walls heat up rapidly on clear days and have a large influence on heat fluxes and the temperature field. The magnitude and direction of the measured turbulent heat flux also depend strongly on the direction of flow relative to surface heating. However, these spatial differences are smoothed by the shear layer at the canyon top. Buoyancy effects from the heated walls were not seen to have as large an impact on the measured flow field as has been shown in numerical experiments. At night canyon walls are shown to be the source of positive sensible heat fluxes. The measurements show that materials and their location, as well as geometry, play a role in regulating the heat exchange between the urban surface and atmosphere.
引用
收藏
页码:273 / 292
页数:20
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