AUTHOR=Renault Matthieu Adrien , Bailey Brian N. , Stoll Rob , Pardyjak Eric R.
TITLE=A rapid method for computing 3-D high-resolution vegetative canopy winds in weakly complex terrain
JOURNAL=Frontiers in Earth Science
VOLUME=11
YEAR=2024
URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/earth-science/articles/10.3389/feart.2023.1251056
DOI=10.3389/feart.2023.1251056
ISSN=2296-6463
ABSTRACT=
To determine near-surface winds within and above vegetation canopies for operational environmental applications, a wind model must run at high-resolution (O(1–10 m)), in a few minutes, using limited input information, and requiring minimal computing resources (e.g., personal computers). Current research models simulate large domains at coarse resolution or small domains at fine scale, but canopy simulations can take days. Fast-modeling approaches are used to solve large complex wind fields, but they oversimplify the roughness elements’ distribution impact on momentum exchanges. To overcome these deficits, the fast-running wind model QUIC-URB (Quick Urban and Industrial Complex) was augmented with a high-resolution canopy wind solver. The wind model includes a non-local factor that describes how momentum propagates through the canopy and how sub-canopy jets appear under certain conditions. QUIC-URB was also coupled with the mesoscale WRF (Weather Research and Forecasting) model to downscale wind fields from a few kilometers to a meter. The new QUIC Canopy Model resolves 3-D wind fields over hundreds of millions of cells in less than 30 s per time step on a personal computer. It was compared to two canopy models for real quasi-homogeneous and heterogeneous canopies. An error analysis shows that the model was relatively accurate with a normalized root-mean-square error of about 0.2 m s−1 in the quasi-homogeneous canopy, and a mean absolute error of 0.3 m s−1. The new model is suitable for coupling with pollution dispersion, wildfire spread, and numerical weather prediction models over weakly complex terrain, defined here as a mildly undulating environment with gradual changes in elevation and a heterogeneous distribution of plants.