RESUMO
There is an urgent need for next-generation smoke research and forecasting (SRF) systems to meet the challenges of the growing air quality, health, and safety concerns associated with wildland fire emissions. This review paper presents simulations and experiments of hypothetical prescribed burns with a suite of selected fire behavior and smoke models and identifies major issues for model improvement and the most critical observational needs. The results are used to understand the new and improved capability required for the next-generation SRF systems and to support the design of the Fire and Smoke Model Evaluation Experiment (FASMEE) and other field campaigns. The next-generation SRF systems should have more coupling of fire, smoke, and atmospheric processes to better simulate and forecast vertical smoke distributions and multiple sub-plumes, dynamical and high-resolution fire processes, and local and regional smoke chemistry during day and night. The development of the coupling capability requires comprehensive and spatially and temporally integrated measurements across the various disciplines to characterize flame and energy structure (e.g., individual cells, vertical heat profile and the height of well mixing flaming gases), smoke structure (vertical distributions and multiple sub-plumes), ambient air processes (smoke eddy, entrainment and radiative effects of smoke aerosols), fire emissions (for different fuel types and combustion conditions from flaming to residual smoldering), as well as night-time processes (smoke drainage and super-fog formation).
RESUMO
Periodic rectangular gold nanomonopoles and nanodipoles in a piecewise inhomogeneous background, consisting of a silicon substrate and a dielectric (aqueous) cover, have been investigated extensively via 3D finite-difference time-domain simulations. The transmittance, reflectance and absorptance response of the nanoantennas were studied as a function of their geometry (length, width, thickness, gap) and found to vary very strongly. The nanoantennas were found to resonate in a single surface plasmon mode supported by the corresponding rectangular cross-section nanowire waveguide, identified as the sa(b)(0) mode [Phys. Rev. B 63, 125417 (2001)]. We determine the propagation characteristics of this mode as a function of nanowire cross-section and wavelength, and we relate the modal results to the performance of the nanoantennas. An approximate expression resting on modal results is proposed for the resonant length of nanomonopoles, and a simple equivalent circuit, also resting on modal results, but involving transmission lines and a capacitor (modelling the gap) is proposed to determine the resonant wavelength of nanodipoles. The expression and the circuit yield results that are in good agreement with the full computations, and thus will prove useful in the design of nanoantennas.