The Town Energy Balance (TEB) model has been refined and improved in order to
explicitly represent street trees and their impacts on radiative transfer: a
new vegetated stratum on the vertical plane, which can shade the road, the
walls, and the low vegetation has been added. This modification led to more
complex radiative calculations, but has been done with a concern to preserve
a certain level of simplicity and to limit the number of new input parameters
for TEB to the cover fraction of trees, the mean height of trunks and trees,
their specific leaf area index, and albedo. Indeed, the model is designed to
be run over whole cities, for which it can simulate the local climatic
variability related to urban landscape heterogeneity at the neighborhood
scale. This means that computing times must be acceptable, and that input
urban data must be available or easy to define. This simplified
characterization of high vegetation necessarily induces some uncertainties in
terms of the solar radiative exchanges, as quantified by comparison of TEB
with a high-spatial-resolution solar enlightenment model (SOLENE).
On the basis of an idealized geometry of an urban canyon with various vegetation
layouts, TEB is evaluated regarding the total shortwave radiation flux
absorbed by the elements that compose the canyon. TEB simulations in summer
gathered best scores for all configurations and surfaces considered, which is
precisely the most relevant season to assess the cooling effect of deciduous
trees under temperate climate. Mean absolute differences and biases of 6.03
and +3.50 W m−2 for road, respectively, and of 3.38 and +2.80 W m−2
for walls have been recorded in vegetationless canyons. In view of the
important incident radiation flux, exceeding 1000 W m−2 at solar noon,
the mean absolute percentage differences of 3 % for both surfaces remain
moderate. Concerning the vegetated canyons, we noted a high variability of
statistical scores depending on the vegetation layout. The greater
uncertainties are found for the solar radiation fluxes received and absorbed
by the high vegetation. The mean absolute differences averaged over the
vegetation configurations during summertime are 21.12 ± 13.39 W m−2 or
20.92 ± 10.87 % of mean absolute percentage differences for the total
shortwave absorption, but these scores are associated with acceptable biases:
−15.96 ± 15.93 W m−2.</p
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