Meteorology & Air Pollution. Dr. Wesam Al Madhoun

Similar documents
Vertical Motion and Atmospheric Stability

EVE 402/502 Air Pollution Generation and Control. Introduction. Intro, cont d 9/18/2015. Chapter #3 Meteorology

Air Pollution Dispersion

1. Large-scale temperature inversions.

Scott Denning CSU CMMAP 1

PHSC 3033: Meteorology Stability

Meteorology. Circle the letter that corresponds to the correct answer

Atmospheric Dispersion, Transport and Deposition. Dispersion. Wind Speed. EOH 468 Spring 2008 Dr. Peter Bellin, CIH, Ph.D.

ENVIRONMENTAL PHYSICS

Adiabatic Lapse Rates and Atmospheric Stability

Chapter 2. Turbulence and the Planetary Boundary Layer

Meteorology 2/6/2017. Wind, and its Interaction with Particle Plumes. Variation of wind speed with elevation. Variation of wind speed during the day

CEE 452/652. Week 3, Lecture 1 Mass emission rate, Atmospheric Stability. Dr. Dave DuBois Division of Atmospheric Sciences, Desert Research Institute

Cloud Development and Forms

MET Lecture 8 Atmospheric Stability

What is Air Temperature? Temperature, Buoyancy, and Vertical Motion. How Atmospehric Temperature is Measured. Temperature Scales

1. Atmospheric Diffusion of Stack Gases

Atmospheric Motions & Climate

6-7 AIR POLLUTION METEOROLOGY The Atmospheric Engine

3.3 USING A SIMPLE PARCEL MODEL TO INVESTIGATE THE HAINES INDEX

14 Oct., Dr. Wilson will post Quiz 2 correct answers and scores over the weekend. Today we begin Ch. 6 Cloud Development and Forms

REMINDERS: Problem Set 2: Due Monday (Feb 3)

ATS 351 Lecture 6. Air Parcel. Air Parcel Movement: Why does rising air expand and cool? Stability & Skew-T Diagrams

Wind: Small Scale and Local Systems Chapter 9 Part 1

Conditions for Offshore Wind Energy Use

4/29/2011. Concept of Stability Lapse Rates Determine Stability and Stability Indices. Air pressure decreases with elevation.

DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS AND TOURISM. Environmental Quality and Protection. Chief Directorate: Air Quality Management & Climate Change

Moisture and Stability in the Atmosphere

Lecture 7. More on BL wind profiles and turbulent eddy structures. In this lecture

Atmospheric Stability. GEOG/ENST 2331 Lecture 10 Ahrens: Chapter 6

Chapter 4: Moisture and Atmospheric Stability The hydrologic cycle

Goals. Unconditional stability Conditional stability Buoyancy Buoyancy waves

Chapter 4. Convec.on Adiaba.c lapse rate

Review of Equivalent Neutral Winds and Stress

VI. Static Stability. Consider a parcel of unsaturated air. Assume the actual lapse rate is less than the dry adiabatic lapse rate: Γ < Γ d

Factors that determine water movement. Morphometry Structure of stratification Wind patterns

PGF. Pressure Gradient. Wind is horizontal movement of the air or other word air in motion. Forces affecting winds 2/14/2017

Chapter 3 Atmospheric Thermodynamics

DUE TO EXTERNAL FORCES

Local Winds. Please read Ahrens Chapter 10

Meteorology and modelling

Atmospheric Stability/Skew-T Diagrams. Fall 2016

= y y. In meteorological parlance, terms such as the above are known as

Forest Winds in Complex Terrain

ASSESSMENT OF SEA BREEZE CHARACTERISTICS FROM SODAR ECHOGRAMS

Flying High. HHJS Science Week Background Information. Forces and Flight

ANALYSIS OF TURBULENCE STRUCTURE IN THE URBAN BOUNDARY LAYER. Hitoshi Kono and Kae Koyabu University of Hyogo, Japan

Enter your parameter set number (1-27)

Computer Practical: Gaussian Plume Model Paul Connolly, October 2017

Atmospheric Stability & Cloud Development

Atmospheric Stability Affects Wind Turbine Performance and Wake Effect

Deep water plume models - What s special about deep water

Meteorology. Circle the letter that corresponds to the correct answer

ATS 351, Spring 2010 Lab #6 Stability & Skew-T 48 points

LAB 1 THERMODYNAMIC DIAGRAMS 100 points Part 2 Date Due

Mountain Forced Flows

2.4. Applications of Boundary Layer Meteorology

Professor Alan H. Stein November 10, 2004

10.6 The Dynamics of Drainage Flows Developed on a Low Angle Slope in a Large Valley Sharon Zhong 1 and C. David Whiteman 2

Kinematics of Vorticity

18 Flight Hazards over High Ground

Investigation on Deep-Array Wake Losses Under Stable Atmospheric Conditions

Sea and Land Breezes METR 4433, Mesoscale Meteorology Spring 2006 (some of the material in this section came from ZMAG)

Civil Air Patrol Auxiliary of the United States Air Force

ESCONDIDO FIRE DEPT TRAINING MANUAL Section Engine Module Page 1 of 15 Wildland Fire Weather Revised

Flow in a shock tube

2013 Wall of Wind (WoW) Contest Informational Workshop

PLUME/PUFF SPREAD AND MEAN CONCENTRATION MODULE SPECIFICATIONS

Low Level Wind Shear: Using Smoke Plumes for Guidance

The total precipitation (P) is determined by the average rainfall rate (R) and the duration (D),

Earth and Planetary Sciences 5 Midterm Exam March 10, 2010

Stefan Emeis

(a) Deflection to the left, slower velocity means greater deflection, greatest deflection at the south pole

COURSE NUMBER: ME 321 Fluid Mechanics I Fluid statics. Course teacher Dr. M. Mahbubur Razzaque Professor Department of Mechanical Engineering BUET

Transport and mixing in the extratropical tropopause region in a high vertical resolution GCM

Turbulence forecasts based on upper-air soundings

The Hydrological Cycle

DIRECCION DE PERSONAL AERONAUTICO DPTO. DE INSTRUCCION PREGUNTAS Y OPCIONES POR TEMA

Chapter 10, Part 1. Scales of Motion. Examples of Wind at Different Scales. Small Scale Winds

ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION

>>>>>>>>WHEN YOU FINISH <<<<<<<< Hand in the answer sheet separately.

APPENDIX A: SENSITIVITY TESTS INPUTS AND SETUP TABLES

Tutorial. BOSfluids. Relief valve

CONSIDERATION OF DENSITY VARIATIONS IN THE DESIGN OF A VENTILATION SYSTEM FOR ROAD TUNNELS

V. SEA and LAND BREEZES:

Wind shear and its effect on wind turbine noise assessment Report by David McLaughlin MIOA, of SgurrEnergy

Goal: Develop quantitative understanding of ENSO genesis, evolution, and impacts

Title: Gravity wave over flat terrain.

MET 200 Lecture 11 Local Winds. Last Lecture: Forces. Review of Forces. Balance of Forces

An adiabatic unsaturated air parcel is displaced downwards a short distance and accelerates upwards towards its original if the density of the air

Background physics concepts (again)

wind wobble unstable

CHAPTER 9. More on meteorology

Physics 11 Unit III Practice Test Projectile Motion. Instructions: Pick the best answer available in Part A and Show all your work for Part B

Meteorology Lecture 17

Real Life Turbulence and Model Simplifications. Jørgen Højstrup Wind Solutions/Højstrup Wind Energy VindKraftNet 28 May 2015

Weather and Meteorology Sheet 1 Adiabatic Processes The definition is:- A system where heat is neither added nor taken from a process.

Observed Roughness Lengths for Momentum and Temperature on a Melting Glacier Surface

Winds and Ocean Circulations

NATS 101, Section 4, Spring 2009 Midterm Examination #2 March 13, 2009

Transcription:

Meteorology & Air Pollution Dr. Wesam Al Madhoun

Dispersion = Advection (Transport) + Dilution (Diffusion) Source Transport Receptor Re-entrainment Fick s law of diffusion J= - D * D C/Dx Where, J= Mass Flux; D = Diffusivity coefficient,; D C/Dx = Concentration gradient Diffusion of pollutants occur due to turbulence, which further depends upon many factors: a. Ambient temperature b. Temperature of emissions c. Roughness factors d. Wind velocity e. Wind direction f. Humidity g. Stability

Air Pollutant Cycle

Dispersion General mean air motion Turbulent velocity fluctuations Diffusion due to concentration gradients from plumes Aerodynamic characteristics of pollution Particles Size Shape Weight

Turbulence Not always completely understood Two types: Atmospheric heating Causes natural convection currents Thermal eddies Mechanical turbulence Results from shear wind effects Result from air movement over the earth s surface, influenced by location of buildings and relative roughness of terrain.

Lapse Rate Important characteristic of atmosphere is ability to resist vertical motion: stability Affects ability to disperse pollutants When small volume of air is displaced upward Encounters lower pressure Expands to lower temperature Assume no heat transfers to surrounding atmosphere Called adiabatic expansion

Adiabatic Expansion To determine the change in temp. w/ elevation due to adiabatic expansion Atmosphere considered a stationary column of air in a gravitational field Gas is a dry ideal gas Ignoring friction and inertial effects ( dt/dz)adiabatic perfect gas = - (g M/ Cp) T = temperature z = vertical distance g = acceleration due to gravity M = molecular weight of air Cp = heat capacity of the gas at constant pressure

Adiabatic Expansion ( dt/dz)adiabatic perfect gas = -0.0098 C/m or ( dt/dz)adiabatic perfect gas = -5.4 F/ft Change in Temp. with change in height

Lapse rate Lapse rate is the negative of temperature gradient Dry adiabatic lapse rate = Metric: SI: Γ = - 1 C/100m or Γ = - 5.4 F/1000ft

Conti. Important is ability to resist vertical motion: stability Comparison of Γ to actual environment lapse rate indicates stability of atmosphere Degree of stability is a measure of the ability of the atmosphere to disperse pollutants

Atmospheric Stability Affects dispersion of pollutants Temperature/elevation relationship principal determinant of atmospheric stability Stable Little vertical mixing Pollutants emitted near surface tend to stay there Environmental lapse rate is same as the dry adiabatic lapse rate

Stability Classes Developed for use in dispersion models Stability classified into 6 classes (A F) A: strongly unstable B: moderately unstable C: slightly unstable D: neutral E: slightly stable F: moderately stable

Vertical Temperature Profiles Environmental lapse rate (ELR) Dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) If, ELR > DALR =sub adiabatic condition, atmosphere is stable. ELR >> DALR= Inversion conditions. Very stable atmosphere. ELR= DALR= atmosphere is neutral. ELR< DALR = super adiabatic condition, atmosphere is unstable. Shapes of plumes depends upon atmospheric stability conditions.

Mixing Height of atmosphere The height of the base of the inversion layer from ground surface.

General Characteristics of Stack Plumes Dispersion of pollutants Wind carries pollution downstream from source Atmospheric turbulence -- causes pollutants to fluctuate from mainstream in vertical and crosswind directions Mechanical & atmospheric heating both present at same time but in varying ratios Affect plume dispersion differently

Plume Types Plume types are important because they help us understand under what conditions there will be higher concentrations of contaminants at ground level.

Looping Plume High degree of convective turbulence Superadiabatic lapse rate -- strong instabilities Associated with clear daytime conditions accompanied by strong solar heating & light winds High probability of high concentrations sporadically at ground level close to stack. Occurs in unstable atmospheric conditions.

Coning Plume Stable with small-scale turbulence Associated with overcast moderate to strong winds Roughly 10 cone Pollutants travel fairly long distances before reaching ground level in significant amounts Occurs in neutral atmospheric conditions

Fanning Plume Occurs under large negative lapse rate Strong inversion at a considerable distance above the stack Extremely stable atmosphere Little turbulence If plume density is similar to air, travels downwind at approximately same elevation

Lofting Plume Favorable in the sense that fewer impacts at ground level. Pollutants go up into environment. They are created when atmospheric conditions are unstable above the plume and stable below.

Fumigation Most dangerous plume: contaminants are all coming down to ground level. They are created when atmospheric conditions are stable above the plume and unstable below. This happens most often after the daylight sun has warmed the atmosphere, which turns a night time fanning plume into fumigation for about a half an hour.