Author:
WETTLAUFER J. S.,WORSTER M. GRAE,HUPPERT HERBERT E.
Abstract
We describe a series of laboratory experiments in which aqueous
salt solutions were
cooled and solidified from above. These solutions serve as model systems
of metallic
castings, magma chambers and sea ice. As the solutions freeze they form
a matrix
of ice crystals and interstitial brine, called a mushy layer.
The brine initially remains
confined to the mushy layer. Convection of brine from the interior of the
mushy layer
begins abruptly once the depth of the layer exceeds a critical value.
The principal path
for brine expelled from the mushy layer is through ‘brine channels’,
vertical channels
of essentially zero solid fraction, which are commonly observed in sea
ice and metallic
castings. By varying the initial and boundary conditions in the experiments,
we have
been able to determine the parameters controlling the critical depth of
the mushy
layer. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that
brine expulsion is initially
determined by a critical Rayleigh number for the mushy layer. The convection
of salty
fluid out of the mushy layer allows additional solidification
within it, which increases
the solid fraction. We present the first measurements of the temporal
evolution of the
solid fraction within a laboratory simulation of growing sea ice. We show
how the
additional growth of ice within the layer affects its rate of growth.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
160 articles.
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