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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/23785
Title: | How tall buildings affect turbulent air flows and dispersion of pollution within a neighbourhood | Authors: | Aristodemou, Elsa Boganegra, Luz Maria Mottet, Laetitia Pavlidis, Dimitrios Constantinou, Achilleas Pain, Christopher Charles Robins, Alan ApSimon, Helen |
Major Field of Science: | Natural Sciences | Field Category: | Earth and Related Environmental Sciences | Keywords: | Air pollution;Computational modelling;Large eddy simulations;Urban environment;Wind tunnel experiments | Issue Date: | Feb-2018 | Source: | Environmental Pollution, 2018, vol. 233, pp. 782-796 | Volume: | 233 | Start page: | 782 | End page: | 796 | Journal: | Environmental Pollution | Abstract: | The city of London, UK, has seen in recent years an increase in the number of high-rise/multi-storey buildings (“skyscrapers”) with roof heights reaching 150 m and more, with the Shard being a prime example with a height of ∼310 m. This changing cityscape together with recent plans of local authorities of introducing Combined Heat and Power Plant (CHP) led to a detailed study in which CFD and wind tunnel studies were carried out to assess the effect of such high-rise buildings on the dispersion of air pollution in their vicinity. A new, open-source simulator, FLUIDITY, which incorporates the Large Eddy Simulation (LES) method, was implemented; the simulated results were subsequently validated against experimental measurements from the EnFlo wind tunnel. The novelty of the LES methodology within FLUIDITY is based on the combination of an adaptive, unstructured, mesh with an eddy-viscosity tensor (for the sub-grid scales) that is anisotropic. The simulated normalised mean concentrations results were compared to the corresponding wind tunnel measurements, showing for most detector locations good correlations, with differences ranging from 3% to 37%. The validation procedure was followed by the simulation of two further hypothetical scenarios, in which the heights of buildings surrounding the source building were increased. The results showed clearly how the high-rise buildings affected the surrounding air flows and dispersion patterns, with the generation of “dead-zones” and high-concentration “hotspots” in areas where these did not previously exist. The work clearly showed that complex CFD modelling can provide useful information to urban planners when changes to cityscapes are considered, so that design options can be tested against environmental quality criteria. This study shows how the presence of tall buildings affects the dispersion of air pollutants within a small neighbourhood, and how concentration hotspots can be generated in areas which were previously pollution-free. | URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/23785 | ISSN: | 02697491 | DOI: | 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.10.041 | Rights: | This is an open access article under the CC BY license | Type: | Article | Affiliation : | London South Bank University Imperial College London University College London University of Surrey |
Publication Type: | Peer Reviewed |
Appears in Collections: | Άρθρα/Articles |
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1-s2.0-S0269749117319322-main.pdf | Fulltext | 4.84 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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