Simulations of flow around a cubical building: comparison with towing-tank data and assessment of radiatively induced thermal effects

Abstract A three-dimensional (3-D) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model, coupled with a meteorological radiation and surface physics package, is used to model the mean flow field and tracer dispersion in the vicinity of an idealized cubical building. We first compare the simulations with earlier numerical studies as well as towing-tank laboratory experiments, where radiation effects were not included. Our simulations capture most of the features revealed by the towing-tank data, including the variation of the flow reattachment point as a function of Froude number and the induction of a prominent lee wave in the low Froude number regime. The simulated tracer concentration also compares very favorably with the data. We then assess the thermal effects due to radiative heating on the ground and building including shading by the building, on the mean flow and tracer dispersion. Our simulations show that convergence within and beyond the cavity zone causes a substantial lofting of the air mass downstream from the building. This lofting results from the combination of thermal heating of the ground and building roof, and vortex circulation associated with the horseshoe eddy along the lateral sides of the building. The specific effect of shading on the flow field is isolated by comparing simulations for which the radiative heating and shading patterns are kept constant, but the environmental wind direction is altered. It is found that the shading exerts local cooling, which can be combined into the overall thermodynamic interaction, described above, to effectively alter the circulation downstream from the building.

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