Intercomparison of nocturnal mixing height estimate methods for urban air pollution modelling

Abstract One of the most important meteorological input parameters for three-dimensional photochemical air pollution models is the mixing height h , which has a strong influence on the shape and intensity of the vertical diffusivity K z and, as a consequence, on ground-level air concentrations of primary and secondary pollutants. A number of indirect algorithms for the estimate of h in nocturnal, stable conditions, when the mixing is dominated by mechanical turbulence, are reviewed and compared with mixing heights derived from wind (SODAR) and temperature (RASS) profiles measured in the Milan urban area during spring and summer 1996. Mixing heights derived from temperature soundings correlate positively with those derived from wind soundings only when a stable layer is superimposed to a quasi-adiabatic layer, while the correlation is very weak in the presence of a ground-based inversion. In general, indirect algorithms perform very poorly if compared with RASS-based estimates, and reasonably well if compared with SODAR-based estimates. Among the others, Benkley and Schulman (1979, Journal of Applied Meteorology 18, 772–780) method, which makes use of wind speed observed at 10 m height, and Nieuwstadt (1984, Boundary-Layer Meteorology 30, 31–55), which makes use of friction velocity and Monin–Obukhov length, give the best results.