The momentum transport and scale-dependent motion characteristics within vegetation canopies play a crucial role in shaping near-surface turbulent structures and exchange processes, yet the interactions among different turbulent scales and their statistical representations remain insufficiently understood. Based on a series of controlled wind tunnel experiments, this study identifies coherent turbulent structures using a phase-space algorithm constructed from streamwise velocity fluctuation u′, acceleration a, and jerk j, and compares transport efficiency (exuberance η). This study uses scale-wise (cut-off frequency) momentum flux contribution analysis, natural visibility graph (NVG), and large–small-scale amplitude modulation to examine transport and multiscale behaviors across different canopy densities, array layouts, and inflow conditions. Results show that canopy density (different Cd drag coefficient) is a primary factor governing transport efficiency. Under low-wind staggered configurations, increasing canopy density strengthens the contribution of low-frequency large-scale motions to total momentum flux. In contrast, high-wind aligned configurations intensify canopy-top shear, enhancing small-scale motions and thereby reducing the relative contribution of large-scale motions. NVG analysis further reveals that in high-density canopies, large-scale acceleration and deceleration events tend toward equilibrium, whereas deceleration events dominate consistently in low- and medium-density cases. Amplitude modulation results indicate that high-density cases exhibit highly consistent modulation behavior, followed by low-density cases, while medium-density cases display a pronounced height-dependent variation, characterized by a distinct modulation critical point. This study proposes a unified analytical framework integrating coherent structure detection, graph-theoretic analysis, multiscale transport characterization, and large–small-scale modulation, providing a comprehensive description of momentum transport and scale motions within canopy flows, and it offers new insight into the mechanisms governing complex vegetation canopy turbulence.
Chen et al. (Mon,) studied this question.