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Smoke plumes associated with wildland fires are difficult to characterize due to the non-linear behavior of the variables involved. Plume chemistry is largely modeled using emission factors to represent the relative trace gas and aerosol species emitted. Plume dynamics are modeled based on assumptions of plume vertical distribution and atmospheric dispersion. In the studies presented here, near and in-source measurements of emissions from prescribed burns are used to characterize the variability of emission factors from low-intensity fires. Emissions factors were found to be in the same range as those from other, similar studies in the literature and it appears that the emission factors may be sensitive to small differences in surface conditions such as fuel moisture, surface wind speed, and the ratio of live to dead fuels. We also used two coupled fire atmosphere models, which utilize the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model called WRF-Fire and WRF-Sfire, to investigate the role that atmospheric stability plays in influencing plume rise as well as developing a technique for assessing plume rise and the vertical distribution of pollutants in regional air quality models. Plume heights, as well as rate of growth of the fire, were found to be sensitive to atmospheric stability while fire rate of spread was not. The plume center-of-mass technique was demonstrated to work well but has slightly low estimates compared to observations.
Advisor: | Lamb, Brian K. |
Commitee: | Chung, Serena, Higuera, Philip, Liu, Heping |
School: | Washington State University |
Department: | Civil Engineering |
School Location: | United States -- Washington |
Source: | DAI-B 75/05(E), Dissertation Abstracts International |
Source Type: | DISSERTATION |
Subjects: | Atmospheric sciences |
Keywords: | Atmospheric stability, Emission factor, Fire behavior, Plume rise, Prescribed fires, Smoke plumes |
Publication Number: | 3611321 |
ISBN: | 978-1-303-71870-0 |