Taylor & Francis Group
Browse
tjhr_a_1671511_sm7492.docx (80.84 kB)

Efficient numerical representation of the impacts of flexible plant reconfiguration on canopy posture and hydrodynamic drag

Download (80.84 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2019-12-17, 12:21 authored by Amir Mehdi Razmi, Marcelo Chamecki, Heidi Margaret Nepf

This study considered a new approach for representing flexible canopies within large-eddy simulation that captures the impacts of reconfiguration on both the canopy posture and the canopy drag. The unsteady change in plant posture in response to the passage of turbulence structures (monami) was assessed using established steady-reconfiguration models responding to the unsteady velocity at the top of the canopy. The new drag and plant posture models improved the modelling of highly flexible canopies by more accurately capturing the observed vertical distribution of peak Reynolds stress. When compared to models that do not consider reconfiguration, or that represent it only through a velocity-dependent drag coefficient, the addition of a velocity-dependent canopy posture (unsteady reconfiguration) achieved up to a 56% reduction of the root mean square error for mean horizontal flow velocity and Reynolds stress profiles over the canopy. The RMSE for turbulence intensities and skewness were reduced up to 48% and 56%, respectively.

Funding

The research reported here was carried out with the support of the Swiss National Science Foundation [grant P2ELP2_158885]; Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung.

History