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Unveiling dynamic changes in the diurnal microclimate of a Buxus sempervirens with non-intrusive imaging of flow field, leaf temperature, and plant microstructure (1903.02283v1)

Published 6 Mar 2019 in physics.flu-dyn

Abstract: Plant response is not only dependent on the atmospheric evaporative demand due to the combined effects of wind speed, air temperature, humidity, and solar radiation, but is also dependent on the water transport within the leaf-xylem-root system. Therefore, a detailed understanding of such dynamics is key to the development of appropriate mitigation strategies and numerical models. In this study, we unveil the diurnal dynamics of the microclimate of a Buxus sempervirens plant using multiple high-resolution non-intrusive imaging techniques. The wake flow field is measured using stereoscopic particle image velocimetry, the spatiotemporal leaf temperature history is obtained using infrared thermography, and additionally, the plant porosity is obtained using X-ray tomography. We find that the wake velocity statistics is not directly linked with the distribution of the porosity but depends mainly on the geometry of the plant foliage which generates the shear flow. The interaction between the shear regions and the upstream boundary layer profile is seen to have a dominant effect on the wake turbulent kinetic energy distribution. Furthermore, the leaf area density distribution has a direct impact on the short-wave radiative heat flux absorption inside the foliage where 50% of the radiation is absorbed in the top 20% of the foliage. This localized radiation absorption results in a high local leaf and air temperature. Furthermore, a comparison of the diurnal variation of leaf temperature and the net plant transpiration rate enabled us to quantify the diurnal hysteresis resulting from the stomatal response lag. The day of this plant is seen to comprise of four stages of climatic conditions: no-cooling, high-cooling, equilibrium, and decaying-cooling stages.

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