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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2003-12-25
    Description: We present the results of an experimental study on the solidification of aqueous solutions of potassium nitrate and sodium nitrate cooled from below. Upon cooling, two distinct mushy layers form, primary and cotectic, separated by an approximately planar horizontal interface. A density reversal between the two mushes causes the residual liquid in the upper, primary mush to be more buoyant than the melt overlying it, while the cotectic mush is compositionally stable. The unstable concentration gradient between the melt and primary mush causes convection that keeps the melt well-mixed and reduces the concentration gradient to zero after a finite time. At this point, the cotectic mush overtakes the primary mush and a transition from a convective regime to a diffusive regime occurs. Our measurements show that this transition is rapid and alters the growth rate of the single (cotectic) mush layer that remains. Concentration measurements taken from within the melt during convection and from within the mush during the diffusive regime show good agreement with the concentration evolution predicted by use of the equilibrium ternary phase diagram. We describe a global conservation model for solidification of a ternary alloy in this regime. Predictions from our model forced with empirical data for the heat and solute fluxes are in good agreement with the measured data for the interface positions of the two mushy layers. We also discuss how solid fractions vary with different melt concentrations in a non-convecting alloy and examine the influence of vertical solute transport in the convecting case. The identification of a density reversal in the solidification of a ternary alloy begins to address the complexities in solidification processes of multi-component alloys.
    Print ISSN: 0022-1120
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-7645
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics , Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2015-01-01
    Description: The behavior of marine-terminating ice sheets, such as the West Antarctic ice sheet, is of interest due to the possibility of rapid grounding-line retreat and consequent catastrophic loss of ice. Critical to modeling this behavior is a choice of basal rheology, where the most popular approach is to relate the ice-sheet velocity to a power-law function of basal stress. Recent experiments, however, suggest that near-grounding line tills exhibit Coulomb friction behavior. Here we address how Coulomb conditions modify ice-sheet profiles and stability criteria. The basal rheology necessarily transitions to Coulomb friction near the grounding line, due to low effective stresses, leading to changes in ice-sheet properties within a narrow boundary layer. Ice-sheet profiles ‘taper off’ towards a flatter upper surface, compared with the power-law case, and basal stresses vanish at the grounding line, consistent with observations. In the Coulomb case, the grounding-line ice flux also depends more strongly on flotation ice thickness, which implies that ice sheets are more sensitive to climate perturbations. Furthermore, with Coulomb friction, the ice sheet grounds stably in shallower water than with a power-law rheology. This implies that smaller perturbations are required to push the grounding line into regions of negative bed slope, where it would become unstable. These results have important implications for ice-sheet stability in a warming climate.
    Print ISSN: 0022-1430
    Electronic ISSN: 1727-5652
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
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