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Challenges of high-fidelity air quality modeling in urban environments - PALM sensitivity study during stable conditions

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Author
Resler, Jaroslav
Bauerová, Petra
Belda, MichalORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-9514-4888WoS Profile - F-4398-2012Scopus Profile - 14324291200
Bureš, Martin
Eben, Kryštof
Fuka, VladimírORCiD Profile - 0000-0001-8712-2892WoS Profile - P-1447-2017Scopus Profile - 25649360800
Geletič, Jan
Jareš, Radek
Karel, Jan
Keder, Josef
Krč, Pavel
Patiño, William
Radović, JelenaORCiD Profile - 0000-0002-6874-9558
Řezníček, Hynek
Suehring, Matthias
Šindelářova, Adriana
Vlček, Ondrej

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Publication date
2024
Published in
Geoscientific Model Development
Volume / Issue
17 (20)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 1991-959X
ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 1991-9603
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  • Faculty of Mathematics and Physics

This publication has a published version with DOI 10.5194/gmd-17-7513-2024

Abstract
Urban air quality is an important part of human well-being, and its detailed and precise modeling is important for efficient urban planning. In this study the potential sources of errors in large eddy simulation (LES) runs of the PALM model in stable conditions for a high-traffic residential area in Prague, Czech Republic, with a focus on street canyon ventilation, are investigated. The evaluation of the PALM model simulations against observations obtained during a dedicated campaign revealed unrealistically high concentrations of modeled air pollutants for a short period during a winter inversion episode. To identify potential reasons, the sensitivities of the model to changes in meteorological boundary conditions and adjustments of model parameters were tested. The model adaptations included adding the anthropogenic heat from cars, setting a bottom limit of the subgrid-scale turbulent kinetic energy (TKE), adjusting the profiles of parameters of the synthetic turbulence generator in PALM, and limiting the model time step. The study confirmed the crucial role of the correct meteorological boundary conditions for realistic air quality modeling during stable conditions. Besides this, the studied adjustments of the model parameters proved to have a significant impact in these stable conditions, resulting in a decrease in concentration overestimation in the range 30 %-66 % while exhibiting a negligible influence on model results during the rest of the episode. This suggested that the inclusion or improvement of these processes in PALM is desirable despite their negligible impact in most other conditions. Moreover, the time step limitation test revealed numerical inaccuracies caused by discretization errors which occurred during such extremely stable conditions.
Keywords
urban air quality, large-eddy simulation, stable conditions
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2862
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WOS:001344326600001
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85209079756
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