Effects of freestream turbulence on the pressure acting on a low-rise building roof in the separated flow region

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Abstract

This paper presents the experimental design and subsequent findings from a series of experiments in a large boundary layer wind tunnel to investigate the variation of surface pressures with increasing upwind terrain roughness on low-rise buildings. Geometrically scaled models of the Wind Engineering Research Field Laboratory experimental building were subjected to a wide range of turbulent boundary layer flows, through precise adjustment of a computer control terrain generator called the Terraformer. The study offers an in-depth examination of the effects of freestream turbulence on extreme pressures under the separation “bubble” for the case of the wind traveling perpendicular to wall surfaces, independently confirming previous findings that the spatial distribution of the peaks is heavily influenced by the mean reattachment length. Further, the study shows that the observed peak pressures collapse if data are normalized by the mean reattachment length and a non-Gaussian estimator for peak velocity pressure.

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Fernández-Cabán, P. L., & Masters, F. J. (2018). Effects of freestream turbulence on the pressure acting on a low-rise building roof in the separated flow region. Frontiers in Built Environment, 4. https://doi.org/10.3389/fbuil.2018.00017

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