Science Inventory

ELEVATED PLUME TRANSPORT AND DIFFUSION: 20 TO 150 KM DOWNWIND OF BEIJING, PRC

Citation:

Lamb, B., Z. Fu, R. Eskridge, R. Benner, H. Westberg, AND J. Mitchell. ELEVATED PLUME TRANSPORT AND DIFFUSION: 20 TO 150 KM DOWNWIND OF BEIJING, PRC. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-90/463 (NTIS PB91183269), 1990.

Description:

Three mobile continuous and an array of fixed sequential syringe analyzers samplers were used to measure plume dispersion rates of SF6 released from a 300 m tower in Beijing during strong, steady winds with neutral conditions. he plume trajectories over the flat, open terrain downwind of Beijing were relatively straight. redicted plume trajectories based on interpolated wind fields from surface and upper air data exhibited a mean separation error of 4 km at 70 km downwind. aximum predicted concentrations from a Gaussian puff model agreed within a factor of two with observed surface profiles when the source was given an initial vertical distribution to account for the effects of wind shear upon horizontal dispersion. hort-term (i.e., 10 to 20 min averaging time) horizontal dispersion rates were essentially equal to the neutral Pasquill-Gifford curve. ispersion coefficients from hourly averaged concentration profiles were 30% larger than the PG neutral curve, but 50% smaller than a linear neutral curve based upon dispersion data collected downwind of a power plant.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:12/31/1990
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 47674