Understanding the mechanisms by which sand and dust particles detach from the land surface has always been one of the most fundamental and critical issues in aeolian physics and dust-storm forecasting. In this study, large-eddy simulation (LES) was employed to resolve the near-wall turbulence structures. Turbulent bursting events were identified using the second-quadrant method, and a force-balance equation for dust-particle entrainment was formulated at burst locations to numerically simulate the entrainment process of particles of different sizes under bursting conditions. By integrating the latest observational data on near-wall turbulent coherent structures during dust storms both the accuracy of flow-field simulations and the physical consistency of particle force analyses were enhanced. The results suggest that, within the present idealized force-balance framework, near-wall turbulent bursting can provide aerodynamic forcing that contributes to the entrainment of sand and dust particles over the simulated parameter range. Under the same friction velocity, the mean number of lifted particles first increases and then decreases with particle size, exhibiting a parabolic trend. For particles of the same size, the number of lifted particles increases significantly with friction velocity. Under identical incoming wind speeds, the number flux of lifted particles decreases nonlinearly with increasing particle size, whereas the mass flux continues to rise with both friction velocity and particle size. These findings further confirm the critical contribution of aerodynamic entrainment to aeolian transport and provide numerical support for refining the dual-mechanism theory of sand entrainment.
Ju et al. (Thu,) studied this question.