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The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile

Worldwide, the majority of rapidly growing neighborhoods are found in the Global South. They often exhibit different building construction and development patterns than the Global North, and urban climate research in many such neighborhoods has to date been sparse. This study presents local-scale ob...

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Autores principales: Crawford, Ben, Krayenhoff, E. Scott, Cordy, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Vienna 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6956886/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31997847
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00704-016-1922-7
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author Crawford, Ben
Krayenhoff, E. Scott
Cordy, Paul
author_facet Crawford, Ben
Krayenhoff, E. Scott
Cordy, Paul
author_sort Crawford, Ben
collection PubMed
description Worldwide, the majority of rapidly growing neighborhoods are found in the Global South. They often exhibit different building construction and development patterns than the Global North, and urban climate research in many such neighborhoods has to date been sparse. This study presents local-scale observations of net radiation (Q (*)) and sensible heat flux (Q (H)) from a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in the desert climate of Andacollo, Chile, and compares observations with results from a process-based urban energy-balance model (TUF3D) and a local-scale empirical model (LUMPS) for a 14-day period in autumn 2009. This is a unique neighborhood-climate combination in the urban energy-balance literature, and results show good agreement between observations and models for Q (*) and Q (H). The unmeasured latent heat flux (Q (E)) is modeled with an updated version of TUF3D and two versions of LUMPS (a forward and inverse application). Both LUMPS implementations predict slightly higher Q (E) than TUF3D, which may indicate a bias in LUMPS parameters towards mid-latitude, non-desert climates. Overall, the energy balance is dominated by sensible and storage heat fluxes with mean daytime Bowen ratios of 2.57 (observed Q (H)/LUMPS Q (E))–3.46 (TUF3D). Storage heat flux (ΔQ (S)) is modeled with TUF3D, the empirical objective hysteresis model (OHM), and the inverse LUMPS implementation. Agreement between models is generally good; the OHM-predicted diurnal cycle deviates somewhat relative to the other two models, likely because OHM coefficients are not specified for the roof and wall construction materials found in this neighborhood. New facet-scale and local-scale OHM coefficients are developed based on modeled ΔQ (S) and observed Q (*). Coefficients in the empirical models OHM and LUMPS are derived from observations in primarily non-desert climates in European/North American neighborhoods and must be updated as measurements in lightweight low-rise (and other) neighborhoods in various climates become available.
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spelling pubmed-69568862020-01-27 The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile Crawford, Ben Krayenhoff, E. Scott Cordy, Paul Theor Appl Climatol Original Paper Worldwide, the majority of rapidly growing neighborhoods are found in the Global South. They often exhibit different building construction and development patterns than the Global North, and urban climate research in many such neighborhoods has to date been sparse. This study presents local-scale observations of net radiation (Q (*)) and sensible heat flux (Q (H)) from a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in the desert climate of Andacollo, Chile, and compares observations with results from a process-based urban energy-balance model (TUF3D) and a local-scale empirical model (LUMPS) for a 14-day period in autumn 2009. This is a unique neighborhood-climate combination in the urban energy-balance literature, and results show good agreement between observations and models for Q (*) and Q (H). The unmeasured latent heat flux (Q (E)) is modeled with an updated version of TUF3D and two versions of LUMPS (a forward and inverse application). Both LUMPS implementations predict slightly higher Q (E) than TUF3D, which may indicate a bias in LUMPS parameters towards mid-latitude, non-desert climates. Overall, the energy balance is dominated by sensible and storage heat fluxes with mean daytime Bowen ratios of 2.57 (observed Q (H)/LUMPS Q (E))–3.46 (TUF3D). Storage heat flux (ΔQ (S)) is modeled with TUF3D, the empirical objective hysteresis model (OHM), and the inverse LUMPS implementation. Agreement between models is generally good; the OHM-predicted diurnal cycle deviates somewhat relative to the other two models, likely because OHM coefficients are not specified for the roof and wall construction materials found in this neighborhood. New facet-scale and local-scale OHM coefficients are developed based on modeled ΔQ (S) and observed Q (*). Coefficients in the empirical models OHM and LUMPS are derived from observations in primarily non-desert climates in European/North American neighborhoods and must be updated as measurements in lightweight low-rise (and other) neighborhoods in various climates become available. Springer Vienna 2016-10-07 2018 /pmc/articles/PMC6956886/ /pubmed/31997847 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00704-016-1922-7 Text en © The Author(s) 2016 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Crawford, Ben
Krayenhoff, E. Scott
Cordy, Paul
The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile
title The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile
title_full The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile
title_fullStr The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile
title_full_unstemmed The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile
title_short The urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in Andacollo, Chile
title_sort urban energy balance of a lightweight low-rise neighborhood in andacollo, chile
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6956886/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31997847
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00704-016-1922-7
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