Publication | Open Access
Evaluating Implementations of the Immersed Boundary Method in the Weather Research and Forecasting Model
14
Citations
49
References
2020
Year
EngineeringGeomorphologyWeather ForecastingClimate ModelingShear Stress ReconstructionEarth ScienceBoundary LayerGeophysicsGeotechnical EngineeringNumerical Weather PredictionDiscretization ErrorsImmersed Boundary MethodWeather ResearchMeteorological MeasurementComputational GeophysicsAtmospheric ModelingHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGeographyForecasting ModelForecastingNumerical InstabilitiesClimatologyCivil EngineeringMeteorological Forcing
Abstract The terrain-following coordinate system used by many atmospheric models can cause numerical instabilities due to discretization errors as resolved terrain slopes increase and the grid becomes highly skewed. The immersed boundary (IB) method, which does not require the grid to conform to the terrain, has been shown to alleviate these errors, and has been used successfully for high-resolution atmospheric simulations over steep terrain, including vertical building surfaces. Since many previous applications of IB methods to atmospheric models have used very fine grid resolution (5 m or less), the present study seeks to evaluate IB method performance over a range of grid resolutions and aspect ratios. Two classes of IB algorithms, velocity reconstruction and shear stress reconstruction, are tested within the common framework of the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model. Performance is evaluated in two test cases, one with flat terrain and the other with the topography of Askervein Hill, both under neutrally stratified conditions. WRF-IB results are compared to similarity theory, observations, and native WRF results. Despite sensitivity to the location at which the IB intersects the model grid, the velocity reconstruction IB method shows consistent performance when used with a hybrid RANS/LES surface scheme. The shear stress reconstruction IB method is not sensitive to the grid intersection, but is less consistent and near-surface velocity errors can occur at coarse resolutions. This study represents an initial investigation of IB method variability across grid resolutions in WRF. Future work will focus on improving IB method performance at intermediate to coarse resolutions.
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