Horizontal Heat Impact of Urban Structures on the Surface Soil Layer and Its Diurnal Patterns under Different Micrometeorological Conditions

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作者
Hongxuan Zhou
Dan Hu
Xiaolin Wang
Fengsen Han
Yuanzheng Li
Xiaogang Wu
Shengli Ma
机构
[1] State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology,
[2] Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences,undefined
[3] Chinese Academy of Sciences,undefined
[4] College of Urban and Rural Construction,undefined
[5] Shanxi Agricultural University,undefined
[6] Taigu County,undefined
[7] Environment and Sustainability Institute,undefined
[8] University of Exeter,undefined
[9] College of Eco-Environmental Engineering,undefined
[10] Qinghai University,undefined
来源
Scientific Reports | / 6卷
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摘要
The temperature of the surface soil layer around different orientation walls was investigated horizontally along several construction-soil micro-gradients in Beijing, China. On a diurnal scale, similar fluctuating trends in T0 and T50 (temperature of surface soil layer, 0 and 0.5 m from the building baseline) adjacent to the external walls of buildings with the same orientation usually appeared under similar micrometeorological conditions. The difference between T0 and T50 (ΔT0–50) can be considered an indicator of the intensity of the horizontal heat effects: higher ΔT0–50 values correspond to greater intensities. The values of ΔT0–50 for south-, north-, east- and west-facing sides of buildings were highest on sunny days in summer and exhibited values of 6.61 K, 1.64 K, 5.93 K and 2.76 K, respectively. The scope of horizontal heat impacts (Sh) changed on a diurnal scale between zero and the maximum, which fluctuated with the micrometeorological conditions. The maximum values of Sh were 0.30, 0.15, 0.20 and 0.20 m for south-, north-, east- and west-facing walls. The ΔT0–50 was related to solar radiation, horizontal heat flux, relative humidity, wind speed, soil moisture differences and air temperature; the relative importance of these factors was 36.22%, 31.80%, 19.19%, 2.67%, 3.68% and 6.44%, respectively.
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