Abstract A key difficulty in air pollution dispersion modeling and quantifying fugitive emission fluxes of pollutants from open-pit mines is that the meteorological fields for such complex terrains cannot be… Click to show full abstract
Abstract A key difficulty in air pollution dispersion modeling and quantifying fugitive emission fluxes of pollutants from open-pit mines is that the meteorological fields for such complex terrains cannot be reliably predicted using simplistic surface layer theory. In this study, transport phenomena over a shallow (100 m) and a deep (500 m) synthetic mine are predicted under thermally unstable, neutral, and stable conditions using CFD modelling. The skimming flow is only predicted under the neutral case, while more complex flow patterns emerge otherwise. Under the unstable case, the shallow and deep mines induce enhanced mixing downstream of the mine, resulting in substantial vertical plume transport and dilution of the pollutants released from the mine. Under the stable case, the plume from the shallow mine is restricted to the surface layer downstream of the mine. However, under the stable case, the plume from the deep mine rises into the substantial portion of the boundary layer due to formation of a standing wave over and inside the mine. The results suggest that the CFD model can predict transport phenomena over open-pit mines reliably, so that the meteorological fields may be incorporated in operational models to improve accuracy of their predictions.
               
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