4.4 Article

A Gradient Tensor-Based Subgrid-Scale Parameterization for Large-Eddy Simulations of Stratified Shear Layers Using the Weather Research and Forecasting Model

Journal

MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW
Volume 150, Issue 9, Pages 2279-2298

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/MWR-D-21-0217.1

Keywords

Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities; Mesoscale processes; Shear structure; flows; Turbulence; Wave breaking; Large eddy simulations; Mesoscale models; Numerical analysis; modeling; Subgrid-scale processes

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This study introduces a new scale-aware subgrid-scale parameterization method and implements it in the Weather Research and Forecasting Model to capture the dynamics of the transition process from laminar to turbulent flow in stratified shear layers at coarse-resolution simulations. The proposed method skillfully represents the unresolved fluxes and reduces biases in climate models, leading to higher accuracy in weather predictions without a high computational cost.
The transition process from laminar stratified shear layer to fully developed turbulence is usually captured using direct numerical simulations, in which the computational cost is extremely high and the numerical domain size is limited. In this work, we introduce a scale-aware subgrid-scale (SGS) parameterization, based on the gradient tensor of resolved variables, which is implemented in the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model. With this new SGS model, we can skillfully resolve the characteristics of transition process, including formation of vortex cores, merging vorticity billows, breaking waves into smaller scales, and developing secondary instability in the stratified shear layer even at coarse-resolution simulations. Our new model is developed such that the time scales of the eddy viscosity and diffusivity terms are represented using the tensor of the gradient and not that of the rate-of-strain, which is commonly used in the parameterization of turbulent-viscosity models. We show that time scales of unresolved transition processes in our new model are correlated with those of vorticity fields. At early times, the power-law slopes in the kinetic and available potential energy spectra are consistent with the process of formation and merging waves with an upscale energy transfer. At later times, the power-law slopes are in line with the process of breaking waves into small-scale motions with a downscale transfer. More importantly, the efficiency of turbulent mixing is mainly high at the edge of vortex filaments and not at the vortices' eyes. These findings can improve our understanding of turbulent mixing process in large-scale wind-induced events, such as tropical cyclones, using the WRF Model. Significance StatementThe evolution of instabilities in stratified shear layers has significant impacts on the structure of large-scale geophysical flows and also on the energy pathway to smaller-scale motions in internal waves and turbulence. Resolving transition processes in stratified shear layers requires very high-resolution simulations in climate models. We propose a new subgrid-scale parameterization that is implemented in the Weather Research and Forecasting Model to capture the dynamics of transition process from laminar to three-dimensional turbulence in stratified shear layers at coarse-resolution simulations. Our new scale-aware parameterization can reduce biases in climate models by skillfully representing unresolved fluxes, leading to higher accuracy in weather predictions of temperature, precipitation, and surface fluxes with an affordable computational cost.

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