TY - JOUR
T1 - Large-eddy simulation of aerosol concentrations in a realistic urban environment
T2 - Model validation and transport mechanism
AU - Du, Yaxing
AU - Isaxon, Christina
AU - Roldin, Pontus
AU - Mattisson, Kristoffer
AU - Karttunen, Sasu
AU - Li, Xiaoyu
AU - Malmqvist, Ebba
AU - Järvi, Leena
PY - 2024/10/1
Y1 - 2024/10/1
N2 - Air pollution in urban environments exhibits large spatial and temporal variations due to high heterogeneous air flow and emissions. To address the complexity of local air pollutant dynamics, a comprehensive large-eddy simulation using the PALM model system v6.0 was conducted. The distribution of flow and vehicle emitted aerosol particles in a realistic urban environment in Malmö, Sweden, was studied and evaluated against on-site measurements made using portable instrumentation on a spring morning in 2021. The canyon transport mechanisms were investigated, and the convective and turbulent mass-transport rates compared to clarify their role in aerosol transport. The horizontal distribution of aerosols showed acceptable evaluation metrics for both mass and number. Flow and pollutant concentrations were more complex than those in idealized street canyon networks. Vertical turbulent mass-transport rate was found to dominate the mass transport process compared with the convective transport rate, contributing more than 70% of the pollutant transport process. Our findings highlight the necessity of examining various aerosol metric due their distinct dispersion behaviour. This study introduces a comprehensive high-resolution modelling framework that accounts for dynamic meteorological and aerosol background boundary conditions, real-time traffic emission, and detailed building features, offering a robust toll for local urban air quality assessment.
AB - Air pollution in urban environments exhibits large spatial and temporal variations due to high heterogeneous air flow and emissions. To address the complexity of local air pollutant dynamics, a comprehensive large-eddy simulation using the PALM model system v6.0 was conducted. The distribution of flow and vehicle emitted aerosol particles in a realistic urban environment in Malmö, Sweden, was studied and evaluated against on-site measurements made using portable instrumentation on a spring morning in 2021. The canyon transport mechanisms were investigated, and the convective and turbulent mass-transport rates compared to clarify their role in aerosol transport. The horizontal distribution of aerosols showed acceptable evaluation metrics for both mass and number. Flow and pollutant concentrations were more complex than those in idealized street canyon networks. Vertical turbulent mass-transport rate was found to dominate the mass transport process compared with the convective transport rate, contributing more than 70% of the pollutant transport process. Our findings highlight the necessity of examining various aerosol metric due their distinct dispersion behaviour. This study introduces a comprehensive high-resolution modelling framework that accounts for dynamic meteorological and aerosol background boundary conditions, real-time traffic emission, and detailed building features, offering a robust toll for local urban air quality assessment.
KW - Aerosol particle
KW - Large eddy simulation
KW - PALM model system
KW - Pollutant dispersion
KW - Transport mechanism
KW - Vehicle emission
KW - 114 Physical sciences
U2 - 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.124475
DO - 10.1016/j.envpol.2024.124475
M3 - Article
C2 - 38950843
AN - SCOPUS:85198968052
SN - 0269-7491
VL - 358
JO - Environmental Pollution
JF - Environmental Pollution
M1 - 124475
ER -