Francisco Salamanca
Arizona State University
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Featured researches published by Francisco Salamanca.
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2010
C. S. B. Grimmond; Matthew Blackett; M. J. Best; Janet F. Barlow; Jong-Jin Baik; Stephen E. Belcher; Sylvia I. Bohnenstengel; I. Calmet; Fei Chen; A. Dandou; Krzysztof Fortuniak; M.L. Gouvea; Rafiq Hamdi; M. Hendry; T. Kawai; Y. Kawamoto; Hiroaki Kondo; E. S. Krayenhoff; S. H. Lee; Thomas Loridan; Alberto Martilli; Valéry Masson; Shiguang Miao; Keith W. Oleson; G. Pigeon; Aurore Porson; Young Hee Ryu; Francisco Salamanca; L. Shashua-Bar; G.J. Steeneveld
A large number of urban surface energy balance models now exist with different assumptions about the important features of the surface and exchange processes that need to be incorporated. To date, no comparison of these models has been conducted; in contrast, models for natural surfaces have been compared extensively as part of the Project for Intercomparison of Land-surface Parameterization Schemes. Here, the methods and first results from an extensive international comparison of 33 models are presented. The aim of the comparison overall is to understand the complexity required to model energy and water exchanges in urban areas. The degree of complexity included in the models is outlined and impacts on model performance are discussed. During the comparison there have been significant developments in the models with resulting improvements in performance (root-mean-square error falling by up to two-thirds). Evaluation is based on a dataset containing net all-wave radiation, sensible heat, and latent heat flux observations for an industrial area in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The aim of the comparison is twofold: to identify those modeling approaches that minimize the errors in the simulated fluxes of the urban energy balance and to determine the degree of model complexity required for accurate simulations. There is evidence that some classes of models perform better for individual fluxes but no model performs best or worst for all fluxes. In general, the simpler models perform as well as the more complex models based on all statistical measures. Generally the schemes have best overall capability to model net all-wave radiation and least capability to model latent heat flux.
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2011
Francisco Salamanca; Alberto Martilli; Mukul Tewari; Fei Chen
AbstractIn the last two decades, mesoscale models (MMs) with urban canopy parameterizations have been widely used to study urban boundary layer processes. Different studies show that such parameterizations are sensitive to the urban canopy parameters (UCPs) that define the urban morphology. At the same time, high-resolution UCP databases are becoming available for several cities. Studies are then needed to determine, for a specific application of an MM, the optimum degree of complexity of the urban canopy parameterizations and the resolution and details necessary in the UCP datasets. In this work, and in an attempt to answer the previous issues, four urban canopy schemes, with different degrees of complexity, have been used with the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model to simulate the planetary boundary layer over the city of Houston, Texas, for two days in August 2000. For the UCP two approaches have been considered: one based on three urban classes derived from the National Land Cover Data of th...
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014
Francisco Salamanca; Matei Georgescu; Alex Mahalov; Mohamed Moustaoui; M. Wang
This article investigates the effect of air conditioning (AC) systems on air temperature and examines their electricity consumption for a semiarid urban environment. We simulate a 10 day extreme heat period over the Phoenix metropolitan area (U.S.) with the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled to a multilayer building energy scheme. The performance of the modeling system is evaluated against 10 Arizona Meteorological Network weather stations and one weather station maintained by the National Weather Service for air temperature, wind speed, and wind direction. We show that explicit representation of waste heat from air conditioning systems improved the 2 m air temperature correspondence to observations. Waste heat release from AC systems was maximum during the day, but the mean effect was negligible near the surface. However, during the night, heat emitted from AC systems increased the mean 2 m air temperature by more than 1°C for some urban locations. The AC systems modified the thermal stratification of the urban boundary layer, promoting vertical mixing during nighttime hours. The anthropogenic processes examined here (i.e., explicit representation of urban energy consumption processes due to AC systems) require incorporation in future meteorological and climate investigations to improve weather and climate predictability. Our results demonstrate that releasing waste heat into the ambient environment exacerbates the nocturnal urban heat island and increases cooling demands.
Environmental Research Letters | 2013
Francisco Salamanca; Matei Georgescu; Alex Mahalov; Mohamed Moustaoui; M. Wang; B M Svoma
Evaluation of built environment energy demand is necessary in light of global projections of urban expansion. Of particular concern are rapidly expanding urban areas in environments where consumption requirements for cooling are excessive. Here, we simulate urban air conditioning (AC) electric consumption for several extreme heat events during summertime over a semiarid metropolitan area with the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model coupled to a multilayer building energy scheme. Observed total load values obtained from an electric utility company were split into two parts, one linked to meteorology (i.e., AC consumption) which was compared to WRF simulations, and another to human behavior. WRF-simulated non-dimensional AC consumption profiles compared favorably to diurnal observations in terms of both amplitude and timing. The hourly ratio of AC to total electricity consumption accounted for ?53% of diurnally averaged total electric demand, ranging from ?35% during early morning to ?65% during evening hours. Our work highlights the importance of modeling AC electricity consumption and its role for the sustainable planning of future urban energy needs. Finally, the methodology presented in this article establishes a new energy consumption-modeling framework that can be applied to any urban environment where the use of AC systems is prevalent.
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2015
Francisco Salamanca; Matei Georgescu; Alex Mahalov; Mohamed Moustaoui
AbstractThis article explores regional impacts on near-surface air temperature and air conditioning (AC) electricity consumption due to projected urban expansion in a semiarid environment. In addition to the modern-day urban landscape setting, two projected urban expansion scenarios are analyzed with the Weather Research and Forecasting Model coupled to a multilayer building energy scheme. The authors simulate a 10-day extreme heat period at high spatial resolution (1-km horizontal grid spacing) over Arizona, one of the fastest-growing regions in the United States. Results show that replacement of natural land surfaces by buildings and pavement increases the local mean near-surface air temperature considerably. Furthermore, present-day waste heat emission from AC systems increases the mean nighttime 2-m air temperature by up to 1°C in some urban locations, but projected urban development aggravates the situation, increasing nighttime air temperatures by up to 1.5°–1.75°C. The contribution of anthropogenic...
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2009
Francisco Salamanca; E. S. Krayenhoff; Alberto Martilli
Abstract An important question arises when modeling a heterogeneous landscape (e.g., an urbanized area) with a mesoscale atmospheric model. The surface within a grid cell of the model (which has a typical dimension of one or more kilometers) can be composed of patches of surfaces of different character. The total sensible heat flux in the grid cell, then, is the aggregate of the heat fluxes from each individual surface, each one with a unique thermal response arising from its thermal properties, among other factors. Current methods to estimate the sensible heat flux consider only one (in the case of flat terrain) or three (roof, walls, and ground, for urban areas) active surfaces with thermal properties that are ideally representative of the materials present in the grid cell. The question is then how to choose the representative thermal properties such that the heat flux computed by the model most closely approximates the aggregate of the fluxes from the different patches. In this work a new way to avera...
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018
Francisco Salamanca; Yizhou Zhang; Michael Barlage; Fei Chen; Alex Mahalov; Shiguang Miao
We have augmented the existing capabilities of the integrated Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF)-urban modeling system by coupling three urban canopy models (UCMs) available in the WRF model with the new community Noah with multiparameterization options (Noah-MP) land surface model (LSM). The WRF-urban modeling system’s performance has been evaluated by conducting six numerical experiments at high spatial resolution (1 km horizontal grid spacing) during a 15 day clear-sky summertime period for a semiarid urban environment. To assess the relative importance of representing urban surfaces, three different urban parameterizations are used with the Noah and Noah-MP LSMs, respectively, over the two major cities of Arizona: Phoenix and Tucson metropolitan areas. Our results demonstrate that Noah-MP reproduces somewhat better than Noah the daily evolution of surface skin temperature and near-surface air temperature (especially nighttime temperature) and wind speed. Concerning the urban areas, bulk urban parameterization overestimates nighttime 2 m air temperature compared to the single-layer and multilayer UCMs that reproduce more accurately the daily evolution of near-surface air temperature. Regarding near-surface wind speed, only the multilayer UCM was able to reproduce realistically the daily evolution of wind speed, although maximum winds were slightly overestimated, while both the single-layer and bulk urban parameterizations overestimated wind speed considerably. Based on these results, this paper demonstrates that the new community Noah-MP LSM coupled to an UCM is a promising physics-based predictive modeling tool for urban applications.
International Journal of Climatology | 2011
Fei Chen; Hiroyuki Kusaka; Robert Bornstein; Jason Ching; C. S. B. Grimmond; Susanne Grossman-Clarke; Thomas Loridan; Kevin W. Manning; Alberto Martilli; Shiguang Miao; David J. Sailor; Francisco Salamanca; Haider Taha; Mukul Tewari; Xuemei Wang; Andrzej A. Wyszogrodzki; Chaolin Zhang
International Journal of Climatology | 2011
C. S. B. Grimmond; Matthew Blackett; M. J. Best; Jong-Jin Baik; Stephen E. Belcher; Jason Beringer; Sylvia I. Bohnenstengel; I. Calmet; Fei Chen; Andrew M. Coutts; A. Dandou; Krzysztof Fortuniak; M.L. Gouvea; Rafiq Hamdi; M. Hendry; Manabu Kanda; Tadashi Kawai; Yoichi Kawamoto; Hozumi Kondo; E. S. Krayenhoff; S. H. Lee; Thomas Loridan; Alberto Martilli; Valéry Masson; Shiguang Miao; Keith W. Oleson; Ryozo Ooka; G. Pigeon; Aurore Porson; Young Hee Ryu
Theoretical and Applied Climatology | 2010
Francisco Salamanca; Andrea Krpo; Alberto Martilli; A. Clappier