Large-eddy simulation of wind pressures on elevated low-rise buildings

Author:

Wang XiangjieORCID,Cai C. S.ORCID,Sun ChaoORCID,Elawady Amal12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Florida International University 3 , Miami, Florida 33172, USA

2. Extreme Events Institute of International Hurricane Research Center, Florida International University 4 , Miami, Florida 33199, USA

Abstract

Residential buildings in coastal communities are often elevated to mitigate flooding and wave-surge impacts. However, the elevations change the local wind field characteristics and may increase the aerodynamic pressure on buildings. Post-event reconnaissance showed that elevated buildings experienced severe structural damage to the roofs, walls, and floors during major hurricanes. Currently, our understanding of aerodynamic pressure on elevated houses is limited. In this paper, a large eddy simulation (LES)-based method is developed to better understand the wind effects on elevated buildings. The inflow generation method, discretizing and synthesizing random flow generation, is adopted to generate inflow boundary conditions satisfying the target spectrum. Two sub-grid scale models, the Smagorinsky and wall-adapted local eddy-viscosity models, are employed to represent the unresolved small-scale eddies. It is found that the eddy structure sizes can strongly affect the pressure fluctuations at the eddy separation zones. The present study advances the understanding of aerodynamics on elevated buildings and provides a reference for future LES-based research on wind effect modeling.

Funder

Louisiana Board of Regents

Gulf Research Program

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Reference57 articles.

1. National coastal population report: Population trends from 1970 to 2020;National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

2. CFD-based evaluation of elevated coastal residential buildings under hurricane wind loads;J. Archit. Eng.,2021

3. Observations and analysis of wind pressures on the floor underside of elevated buildings;Eng. Struct.,2020

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