Abstract
Results from two nested-grid large-eddy simulations comparing cases with and without a plant canopy are presented. Through comparisons of numerically generated mean and turbulence statistics, the influence of a plant canopy with a leaf area index of two is shown to modify the air flow compared with an identical case without plants. Investigations of instantaneous fields and spatial spectra show that a plant canopy alters the spatial structure of turbulence and acts to shift the dominant scale to a scale on the order of the canopy height. Distributed drag and scalar sources, representing the presence of a scalar emitting deciduous forest, have little influence on top-down diffusion, but enhanced mixing and increased turbulence intensities result in a dramatic modification to bottom-up scalar diffusion up to ∼4.5 times the height of the canopy. Use of previously proposed bottom-up gradient function with observations of scalar gradients under unstable stability conditions at 50 m over a 25 m tall forest (leaf area index of two) are shown to lead to an underestimate of the scalar emission flux by a factor of four. New top-down and bottom-up functions are proposed to include these canopy-induced effects for this particular canopy.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1415-1434 |
| Number of pages | 20 |
| Journal | Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society |
| Volume | 129 |
| Issue number | 590 PART A |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Apr 2003 |
Keywords
- Large-eddy simulation
- Plants
- Vegetation
- Vertical scalar mixing