LAGRANGIAN PARTICLE MODELING OF BUOYANT POINT SOURCES - PLUME RISE AND ENTRAPMENT UNDER CONVECTIVE CONDITIONS

Citation
P. Hurley et W. Physick, LAGRANGIAN PARTICLE MODELING OF BUOYANT POINT SOURCES - PLUME RISE AND ENTRAPMENT UNDER CONVECTIVE CONDITIONS, Atmospheric environment. Part A, General topics, 27(10), 1993, pp. 1579-1584
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences
ISSN journal
09601686
Volume
27
Issue
10
Year of publication
1993
Pages
1579 - 1584
Database
ISI
SICI code
0960-1686(1993)27:10<1579:LPMOBP>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
This paper describes several aspects of a Lagrangian particle model ca pable of simulating dispersion from buoyant point sources. The equatio ns of Briggs (American Meteorological Society, 1975) are used to calcu late the plume final rise heights, and a skewed homogeneous turbulence parameterization is used within the convective boundary layer. The ho mogeneous assumption enables an order of magnitude greater time step t o be used than is normally the case, and was shown to have minimal eff ect on hourly averaged ground level concentrations by Hurley and Physi ck (Atmospheric Environment 25A, 1313-1325, 1991; 27A, 619-624, 1993). By including statistics from both ambient and source-induced (plume) turbulence in the probability density function (pdf) of the Langevin e quation, we are able to apply this equation to particles in the plume as it rises from the stack to the final rise height. The model is used here to simulate various plume rise and entrapment laboratory experim ents of Willis and Deardorff (Atmospheric Environment 17, 2435-2447, 1 983; 21, 1725-1735, 1987) under convective conditions with a capping s table atmosphere. The simulations show that the model can reproduce th e results of the laboratory experiments when a 15% enhancement to the entrainment parameter in the mean plume rise equations is used. Justif ication for this modification can be related to neglect of the effect of ambient turbulence upon entrainment in the plume rise equations, wh ich in free convective turbulence may be significant.