Measurements of the vertical entrainment velocity into two-dimensional dense gas plumes over fully rough surfaces were carried out as part of a co-operative research programme with wind tunnel facilities in the USA. This paper presents results obtained for stable boundary layer conditions in the EnFlo wind tunnel at the University of Surrey; a companion paper treats the neutral boundary layer case. Mean velocity and temperature, turbulent normal and shear tresses, temperature #uctuations and heat #uxes were measured and used to demonstrate that a moderately stable atmospheric boundary layer had been successfully simulated in the tunnel. Entrainment velocities,=, were then deduced from the streamwise development of the concentration "eld, non-dimensionalised with respect to the friction velocity in the undisturbed #ow, u*, and correlated with the plume Richardson number, Ri*. Higher non-dimensional entrainment speeds,=/u*, were observed for Ri*'5 in the stable boundary layer than in the neutral boundary layer, the di!erence growing with increasing Richardson number. Emission velocity ratios, =/u*, were however larger in the stable experiments, and exceeded one at about Ri*"18. Entrainment in the stable boundary layer appeared therefore to be more sensitive to emission velocity ratio than in the neutral case. Entrainment behaviour for Ri*)5 followed that found in the neutral boundary layer. In this regime, use of the neutral boundary layer entrainment speed correlation is unlikely to lead to the over-prediction of plume dilution rates in moderately stable boundary layers.

A wind tunnel study of dense gas dispersion in a stable boundary layer over a rough surface

Contini D;
2001

Abstract

Measurements of the vertical entrainment velocity into two-dimensional dense gas plumes over fully rough surfaces were carried out as part of a co-operative research programme with wind tunnel facilities in the USA. This paper presents results obtained for stable boundary layer conditions in the EnFlo wind tunnel at the University of Surrey; a companion paper treats the neutral boundary layer case. Mean velocity and temperature, turbulent normal and shear tresses, temperature #uctuations and heat #uxes were measured and used to demonstrate that a moderately stable atmospheric boundary layer had been successfully simulated in the tunnel. Entrainment velocities,=, were then deduced from the streamwise development of the concentration "eld, non-dimensionalised with respect to the friction velocity in the undisturbed #ow, u*, and correlated with the plume Richardson number, Ri*. Higher non-dimensional entrainment speeds,=/u*, were observed for Ri*'5 in the stable boundary layer than in the neutral boundary layer, the di!erence growing with increasing Richardson number. Emission velocity ratios, =/u*, were however larger in the stable experiments, and exceeded one at about Ri*"18. Entrainment in the stable boundary layer appeared therefore to be more sensitive to emission velocity ratio than in the neutral case. Entrainment behaviour for Ri*)5 followed that found in the neutral boundary layer. In this regime, use of the neutral boundary layer entrainment speed correlation is unlikely to lead to the over-prediction of plume dilution rates in moderately stable boundary layers.
2001
Inglese
35
13
2253
2263
11
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Entrainment
Richardson number
Plume depth
Plume spread
Concentration
LDA
7
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Robins, A; Castro, I; Hayden, P; Steggel, N; Contini, D; Heist, D; Taylor, Tj
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/236407
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