Abstract
A particle grid air quality modeling approach that can incorporate chemistry is proposed as an alternative to the conventional partial differential equation (PDE) grid air quality modeling approach. In this approach, each particle is tagged with different species masses and particles in the same grid participate in chemical reactions. The approach is flexible and removes the advection and point source problems encountered in the PDE approach. For a typical grid size of 5 km × 5 km × 50 m used in the lowest layer of an urban air quality model, use of 2000–3000 particles of unequal masses per grid cell will yield a highly accurate grid‐averaged instantaneous concentration field that undergoes eddy diffusion for a period of about 1 day. Use of an hourly averaged concentration reduces the demand of particle per cell to about 500. Increasing the grid size also reduces the demand on the number of particles per cell. For the choice of our Lagrangian integral time scales, the time step must be small (10 s) for vertical dispersion simulation but can be large (200 s) for horizontal dispersion simulation. To reduce computation time, a time‐splitting scheme is, proposed to simulate the horizontal and vertical dispersion simulations in an alternating sequence. The present study also shows that the oft‐used second‐order‐accurate finite difference scheme for solving the diffusion equation tends to overpredict the peak of a sharply peaked concentration.
Keywords
Related Publications
A particle grid air quality modeling approach: 2. Coupling with chemistry
The particle grid method is applied to a system of 10 reacting chemical species in a two‐dimensional rotating flow field with and without diffusion. Two types of chemistry grids...
A numerical study of three-dimensional turbulent channel flow at large Reynolds numbers
The three-dimensional, primitive equations of motion have been integrated numerically in time for the case of turbulent, plane Poiseuille flow at very large Reynolds numbers. A ...
Dynamics of solitons in filtered dispersion-managed systems
We present measurements of the temporal evolution of soliton propagation in a dispersion managed fiber transmission line containing one optical bandpass filter in each map perio...
Transport of <i>Lycopodium</i> spores and other small particles to rough surfaces
Measurements have been made in the field and in a wind tunnel of the transport of Lycopodium spores to grass an d other surfaces, and wind tunnel experiments also have been done...
Addressing Global Mortality from Ambient PM<sub>2.5</sub>
Ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) has a large and well-documented global burden of disease. Our analysis uses high-resolution (10 km, global-coverage) concentration data a...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1994
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 99
- Issue
- D1
- Pages
- 1019-1031
- Citations
- 25
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1029/93jd02795