4.7 Article

Use of the Kit Fox field data to analyze dense gas dispersion modeling issues

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 35, Issue 13, Pages 2231-2242

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S1352-2310(00)00481-7

Keywords

dispersion; dense gases; Kit Fox dense gas experiment; model evaluation

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The 1995 Kit Fox dense gas field data set consists of 52 trials where short-duration CO2 gas releases were made at ground level over a rough surface during neutral to stable conditions. The experiments were intended to demonstrate the effects on dense gas clouds of relatively large roughnesses typical of industrial process plants. Fast response concentration observations were made by 80 samplers located on four downwind lines (25, 50, 100, and 225m), including profile observations on three towers on each of the closest three arcs. Detailed meteorological measurements were made on several towers within and outside of the roughness arrays. The data analysis emphasized the variation of maximum concentration with surface roughness, the dependence of cloud advection speed on cloud depth, the variation of the three components of dispersion with ambient turbulence, and the dependence of vertical entrainment rate on ambient friction velocity and cloud Richardson number. The Kit Fox data were used to evaluate a specific dense gas dispersion model (HEGADAS 3 +), with emphasis on whether it would be able to account for the increased roughness. The model was able to satisfactorily simulate the observed concentrations, with a mean bias of about 5% and with about 90% of the predictions within a factor of two of the observations. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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