17th Symposium on Boundary Layers and Turbulence
27th Conference on Agricultural and Forest Meteorology

J2.5

Impact of an imposed wall-jet on canopy turbulence and the net ecosystem-atmosphere exchange of carbon dioxide

Shaolin Mao, National Institute for Global Environmental Change, and Tulane Univ., New Orleans, LA; and E. (. G. Patton, Z. G. Feng, and E. E. Michaelides

The net ecosystem-atmosphere exchange (NEE) of carbon dioxide (CO2) as influenced by an imposed wall-jet velocity profile is investigated using three-dimensional and time-dependent large-eddy simulation (LES). This wall-jet velocity profile mimics that of a nocturnal drainage flow. A distributed, plane source is located within the canopy in order to simulate the transport of CO2. The NEE may be obtained by inte-gration of the rate of change of the concentration of CO2 over the computational domain. Numerical re-sults of the instantaneous and mean velocity fields are presented and their impact on the evolution and propagation of CO2 concentration within and above the canopy. We examine the influence of different canopy types, and source strengths on the accumulation and transport of CO2 in the atmospheric boundary layer. We compare horizontal and vertical CO2 advection terms and analyze the budget of NEE of CO2 in detail. The results show that 10-20% of NEE is drained out by advection when strong turbulence and low heat flux is present. The results also show that the turbulence component in the transverse direction is sig-nificant. .

Joint Session 2, Roughness Sublayer Turbulence: Vegetative Canopies (Joint between 17BLT and 27AgForest)
Tuesday, 23 May 2006, 8:15 AM-11:15 AM, Kon Tiki Ballroom

Previous paper  Next paper

Browse or search entire meeting

AMS Home Page