ENVIRONMENTAL CFD SIMULATION AND VISUALIZATION: Homeiillut

Examples in Support of the Reconstruction of the Smoke/Dust Flume from the World Trade Center ^pr i I fit V

Site Following the Events of September 11, 2001.	J

Following the Events of September
Alan Huber1, Matt Freeman2, Richard Spencer2, and Karl Kuehlert3

'Atmospheric Sciences Modeling Division, Air Resources Laboratory, national Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
2U. S. EPA Scientific Visualization Center, SAIC, RTP, MC; 'Fluent, Inc., Lebanon, NH.

The Challenge

Understanding the pathway of toxic air pollutants from their source to
humans finds immediate application in the Agency's role in Homeland
Security. The collapse of the New York World Trade Center Towers
demonstrated some of the shortcomings in conducting exposure
analyses in urban areas where the air flow and hence flow of pollutants
around large buildings is poorly understood. Information from CFD
simulations can be used to look at events after they have happened or
to develop reliable, simple models to support rapid risk assessments.
CFD simulations provide the data which then are put into 3-D pictures
to understand what is happening.

What is Scientific Visualization?

It transforms equations into 3-D pictures, so that researchers can see
their computations. Visualization in scientific computing helps us
understand the science by seeing it.

What is Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) ?

M Computational (having to do with mathematics & computation)

¦Fluid Dynamics (the dynamics of things that flow)

CFD software provides physical models and the ability to closely match the
shape of the objects being modeled. CFD simulations use models with full
physical processes to develop a 3-D picture of real or predicted events

¦Richard Hamming observed many years ago that "The purpose of Iscientific 1
computing is insight, not numbers. " CFD can provide realistic insight not
otherwise available

What is being done to support WTC assessments?

Time Sequence of Events being CFD Simulated and Visualized:

¦	The plane crash into the building produced a short-lived "fireball" smoke plume

¦	The burning building produced a continuous elevated smoke plume before the
building collapse

¦	The building collapse produced a short period of high winds and a dense
smoke/dust cloud

¦	The continued burning at "ground zero" produces a continuous smoke plume

Example CFD Application

Accelerating Collapse

Building geometry constructed
using photogrammetry by
Vexcel Corporation based on
analyses of a series of
photographs at different
orientations.

Partnering to Protect Human Health and the Environment

Smoke&dust cloud following the collapse of the North tower. Vortices that
are generated around the collapse transport smoke & dust outward and into a
trailing column. The color shading marks areas with smoke&dust vented
from collapsing floor. Surface air velocities are high (exceed 100 mph) as the
collapse hits bottom.

Example photograph
of WTC Area.

Example digital model of buildings with a sample of CFD
calculation volumes highlighted in the simulation domain.

Example photograph of the whole lower
Manhattan study area.

Visualization of outer boundary of the smoke&/dist cloud during the first 3
minutes following the building collapse and subsequent transport. Tine
sequence below : upper left - upper right - lower left - lower right.


-------