Urbanization and climate change intensify urban heat islands and air pollution; therefore, street canyon building planning that accounts for road orientation, shading, thermal environment, and ventilation is crucial. This study uses numerical simulations to investigate how non-uniform wall and road heating affects airflow and pollutant dispersion in street canyons under varying Richardson numbers (Ri) and heating scenarios (windward wall, leeward wall, road surface). The results indicate that large wall–atmosphere temperature differences combined with low incoming wind speed (high Ri) make thermal buoyancy a dominant control on canyon flow and pollutant transport. Heating of the leeward wall and road surface enhances ventilation and pollutant removal (prominently when the Ri ≥ 0.49), whereas heating of the windward wall suppresses dispersion and increases concentrations (prominently when the Ri ≥ 0.12). For a north–south street, diurnal solar heating produces strong micro-environmental contrasts. With easterly winds, morning heating of the windward wall elevates pollutant levels, while afternoon heating of the leeward wall promotes dispersion and lowers concentrations. Specifically, compared with the isothermal condition, the turbulent exchange rate at the top of the street canyon is enhanced to 1.71~6.86 times, while the convective exchange rate is suppressed to 58%~83% in the morning and enhanced to 1.21~1.92 times. These findings suggest that urban planning should limit windward wall temperature rises via shading and greening; thus, single-sided sidewalk and greening layouts on the windward side are recommended.
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Wen Xu
Duo Xu
Yunfei Wu
Buildings
Xi'an Jiaotong University
Shaanxi Normal University
Xi'an Shiyou University
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Xu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e3201440886becb653f37c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16081567