Rossby number similarity of an atmospheric RANS model using limited-length-scale turbulence closures extended to unstable stratification

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Abstract

The design of wind turbines and wind farms can be improved by increasing the accuracy of the inflow models representing the atmospheric boundary layer. In this work we employ one-dimensional Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) simulations of the idealized atmospheric boundary layer (ABL), using turbulence closures with a length-scale limiter. These models can represent the mean effects of surface roughness, Coriolis force, limited ABL depth, and neutral and stable atmospheric conditions using four input parameters: the roughness length, the Coriolis parameter, a maximum turbulence length, and the geostrophic wind speed. We find a new model-based Rossby similarity, which reduces the four input parameters to two Rossby numbers with different length scales. In addition, we extend the limited-length-scale turbulence models to treat the mean effect of unstable stratification in steady-state simulations. The original and extended turbulence models are compared with historical measurements of meteorological quantities and profiles of the atmospheric boundary layer for different atmospheric stabilities.

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Paul Van Der Laan, M., Kelly, M., Floors, R., & Peña, A. (2020). Rossby number similarity of an atmospheric RANS model using limited-length-scale turbulence closures extended to unstable stratification. Wind Energy Science, 5(1), 355–374. https://doi.org/10.5194/wes-5-355-2020

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