Air pollutant dispersion around high-rise buildings due to roof emissions

Guang Ze Guo, Yong Yu, K. C.S. Kwok, Yu Zhang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Air quality in the built environment has a significant impact on public health, particularly in densely populated cities where residents live in closely-packed high-rise buildings. In this case, communicable respiratory diseases are apt to spread through vent pipe emissions on the building roof and facilitate community transmission. This study applied computational fluid dynamics to simulate the dispersion of the pollutants discharged from the roof vent pipes around high-rise buildings. The results show that the dispersion process is dominated by wind-structure interaction, wind incidence angle, air pollutant discharge location, and vent pipe height, and the dispersion is more complex around crucifix-form buildings than cubic ones. When the wind incidence angle reaches around 90°, the air pollutants are entrained in the re-entry of the building, thus impeding the dispersion process. The building areas most adversely affected by air pollutants are located on high floors near the vent pipe. Changing air pollutant discharge location and increasing the height of the vent pipe can significantly reduce the affected area. Where the height of the vent pipe is restricted, parapets at the roof edges are suggested to further reduce the adverse effects of air pollutants. These research findings can help to reduce the risk of airborne contaminants/diseases spreading in current and future built environments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109215
JournalBuilding and Environment
Volume219
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2022

Keywords

  • Computational fluid dynamics
  • High-rise building
  • Pollutant dispersion
  • Roof discharge location
  • Wind-structure interaction

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