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Wind tunnel, field and numerical investigations of plume downwash and dispersion at an arctic industrial site

Posted on:1990-07-08Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Washington State UniversityCandidate:Guenther, Alex BrianFull Text:PDF
GTID:1472390017454289Subject:Physics
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
his study was designed to investigate the influence of the arctic atmospheric boundary layer and the complex flow pattern generated by building clusters on dispersion from a buoyant source. This was accomplished by analyzing data from wind tunnel, field, and numerical dispersion experiments for flow around a specific Prudhoe Bay, Alaska oil-gathering center. The results were used to describe plume downwash and the arctic boundary layer and to evaluate current Gaussian plume downwash techniques.;Field observations indicate that the winter-time tundra surface has a very small (0.3 mm) surface roughness. A persistent temperature inversion was observed near the cold tundra surface and was attributed to the limited solar insolation and a relatively warm maritime-influenced air mass. Observations of turbulence and surface layer structure at heights above 15 m are similar to measurements made at lower latitudes. Field tracer measurements indicate that plume downwash and dispersion dominates the distribution of ground-level concentrations near the buoyant, short stack sources typical of arctic industrial facilities. An order of magnitude increase in maximum concentration occurs as wind speed increases from 5 to 8...
Keywords/Search Tags:Arctic, Plume downwash, Wind, Field, Dispersion
PDF Full Text Request
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