Abstract:
Trees are often planted next to buildings for shade, evapotranspiration cooling, and as windbreaks.
As windbreaks, trees slow down wind, consequently reducing the natural ventilation of
the buildings that they shield. This reduction in natural ventilation has such parameters as the
trees’ locations, geometry (height (h), width (w), thickness (t)), foliage (e.g., shape and thickness),
leaf area density (LAD), and leaf drag coefficient (Cd). This study investigated how these parameters
impact the cross ventilation of a generic building (5 m × 5 m × 5 m) exposed to an
atmospheric boundary layer wind flow using Reynolds Average Navier-Stokes (RANS)-based
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations. Using source terms, trees were modeled as a
porous medium, which decelerates wind speed and increases turbulence generation and dissipation.
The effects of trees on cross ventilation were quantified by calculating ventilation rate
reduction and conducting a local sensitivity analysis (LSA). As the LSA revealed, LAD, h, and Cd
were the three parameters with the most influence on reducing cross-ventilation rates, which are
strongly and linearly dependent on LAD and Cd. Cross ventilation rates vary with w and d nonlinearly
despite their minor impact. Moreover, conical or oval foliage with a narrow upper part
affects cross ventilation less than cuboidal or V-shaped foliage with a wider upper section. This
study recommends trees shorter than 0.25H, and thinner than 0.168H with sparse and conical
foliage to be planted upstream of a building, but not within 1H–3.5H, to minimize adverse effects
on cross ventilation.
Citation:
Zhang, X., Buddhika, J. W. G., Wang, J., Weerasuriya, A. U., & Tse, K. T. (2023). Numerical investigation of effects of trees on cross-ventilation of an isolated building. Journal of Building Engineering, 73, 106808. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jobe.2023.106808