Author:
CHUNG C. A.,WORSTER M. GRAE
Abstract
Motivated by industrial and geophysical solidification problems such as segregation
in metallic castings and brine expulsion from growing sea ice, we present and solve a
model for steady convection in a two-dimensional mushy layer of a binary mixture.
At sufficiently large amplitudes of convection, steady states are found in which plumes
emanate from vertical chimneys (channels of zero solid fraction) in the mushy layer.
The mush–liquid interface, including the chimney wall, is a free boundary whose
shape and location we determine using local equilibrium conditions. We map out
the changing structure of the system as the Rayleigh number varies, and compute
various measures of the amplitude of convection including the flux of solute out of
the mushy layer, through chimneys. We find that there are no steady states if the
Rayleigh number is less than a global critical value, which is less than the linear
critical value for convection to occur. At larger values of the Rayleigh number we
find, in agreement with experiments, that the width of chimneys and the height of the
mushy layer both decrease relative to the thermal-diffusion length, which is the scale
height of the mushy layer in the absence of convection. We find evidence to suggest
that the spacing between neighbouring chimneys at high Rayleigh numbers is smaller
than the critical wavelengths of both the linear and global stability modes.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
41 articles.
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