| Literature DB >> 31379388 |
Mitchell Bushuk1,2, David M Holland2,3, Timothy P Stanton4, Alon Stern2, Callum Gray5.
Abstract
Ice scallops are a small-scale (5-20cm) quasi-periodic ripple pattern that occurs at the ice-water interface. Previous work has suggested that scallops form due to a self-reinforcing interaction between an evolving ice-surface geometry, an adjacent turbulent flow field, and the resulting differential melt rates that occur along the interface. In this study, we perform a series of laboratory experiments in a refrigerated flume to quantitatively investigate the mechanisms of scallop formation and evolution in high resolution. Using particle-image velocimetry, we probe an evolving ice-water boundary layer at sub-millimeter scales and 15Hz frequency. Our data reveals three distinct regimes of ice-water interface evolution: A transition from flat to scalloped ice; an equilibrium scallop geometry; and an adjusting scallop interface. We find that scalloped ice geometry produces a clear modification to the ice-water boundary layer, characterized by a time-mean recirculating eddy feature that forms in the scallop trough. Our primary finding is that scallops form due to a self reinforcing feedback between the ice-interface geometry and shear production of turbulent kinetic energy in the flow interior. The length of this shear production zone is therefore hypothesized to set the scallop wavelength.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31379388 PMCID: PMC6677155 DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2019.398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Fluid Mech ISSN: 0022-1120 Impact factor: 3.627