Literature DB >> 32900954

Ultra-sharp pinnacles sculpted by natural convective dissolution.

Jinzi Mac Huang1, Joshua Tong1, Michael Shelley2,3, Leif Ristroph2.   

Abstract

The evolution of landscapes, landforms, and other natural structures involves highly interactive physical and chemical processes that often lead to intriguing shapes and recurring motifs. Particularly intricate and fine-scale features characterize the so-called karst morphologies formed by mineral dissolution into water. An archetypal form is the tall, slender, and sharply tipped karst pinnacle or rock spire that appears in multitudes in striking landforms called stone forests, but whose formative mechanisms remain unclear due to complex, fluctuating, and incompletely understood developmental conditions. Here, we demonstrate that exceedingly sharp spires also form under the far-simpler conditions of a solid dissolving into a surrounding liquid. Laboratory experiments on solidified sugars in water show that needlelike pinnacles, as well as bed-of-nails-like arrays of pinnacles, emerge robustly from the dissolution of solids with smooth initial shapes. Although the liquid is initially quiescent and no external flow is imposed, persistent flows are generated along the solid boundary as dense, solute-laden fluid descends under gravity. We use these observations to motivate a mathematical model that links such boundary-layer flows to the shape evolution of the solid. Dissolution induces these natural convective flows that, in turn, enhance dissolution rates, and simulations show that this feedback drives the shape toward a finite-time singularity or blow-up of apex curvature that is cut off once the pinnacle tip reaches microscales. This autogenic mechanism produces ultra-fine structures as an attracting state or natural consequence of the coupled processes at work in the closed solid-fluid system.

Entities:  

Keywords:  dissolution; fluid–structure interaction; geomorphology; natural convection; stone forest

Year:  2020        PMID: 32900954      PMCID: PMC7519309          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2001524117

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  6 in total

1.  Periodic boundary motion in thermal turbulence

Authors: 
Journal:  Phys Rev Lett       Date:  2000-05-08       Impact factor: 9.161

2.  Relevant length scale of barchan dunes.

Authors:  Pascal Hersen; Stéphane Douady; Bruno Andreotti
Journal:  Phys Rev Lett       Date:  2002-12-09       Impact factor: 9.161

3.  Do dissolving objects converge to a universal shape?

Authors:  Elias Nakouzi; Raymond E Goldstein; Oliver Steinbock
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2014-11-26       Impact factor: 3.882

4.  The role of shape-dependent flight stability in the origin of oriented meteorites.

Authors:  Khunsa Amin; Jinzi Mac Huang; Kevin J Hu; Jun Zhang; Leif Ristroph
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-07-26       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Sculpting of an erodible body by flowing water.

Authors:  Leif Ristroph; Matthew N J Moore; Stephen Childress; Michael J Shelley; Jun Zhang
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2012-11-12       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Dynamic reorganization of river basins.

Authors:  Sean D Willett; Scott W McCoy; J Taylor Perron; Liran Goren; Chia-Yu Chen
Journal:  Science       Date:  2014-03-07       Impact factor: 47.728

  6 in total

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