4.4 Article

The Effect of Mesh Resolution on Convective Boundary Layer Statistics and Structures Generated by Large-Eddy Simulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Volume 68, Issue 10, Pages 2395-2415

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JAS-D-10-05010.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research
  2. National Science Foundation through the National Center for Atmospheric Research
  3. Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]

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A massively parallel large-eddy simulation (LES) code for planetary boundary layers (PBLs) that utilizes pseudospectral differencing in horizontal planes and solves an elliptic pressure equation is described. As an application, this code is used to examine the numerical convergence of the three-dimensional time-dependent simulations of a weakly sheared daytime convective PBL on meshes varying from 32(3) to 1024(3) grid points. Based on the variation of the second-order statistics, energy spectra, and entrainment statistics, LES solutions converge provided there is adequate separation between the energy-containing eddies and those near the filter cutoff scale. For the convective PBL studied, the majority of the low-order moment statistics (means, variances, and fluxes) become grid independent when the ratio z(i)/(C-s Delta(f)) > 310, where z(i) is the boundary layer height, Delta(f) is the filter cutoff scale, and C-s is the Smagorinsky constant. In this regime, the spectra show clear Kolmogorov inertial subrange scaling. The bulk entrainment rate determined from the time variation of the boundary layer height w(e) = dz(i)/dt is a sensitive measure of the LES solution convergence; w(e) becomes grid independent when the vertical grid resolution is able to capture both the mean structure of the overlying inversion and the turbulence. For all mesh resolutions used, the vertical temperature flux profile varies linearly over the interior of the boundary layer and the minimum temperature flux is approximately -0.2 of the surface heat flux. Thus, these metrics are inadequate measures of solution convergence. The variation of the vertical velocity skewness and third-order moments expose the LES's sensitivity to grid resolution.

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