MODELLING SEA ICE GROWTH

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The freezing of water to ice is a classic problem in applied mathematics, involving the solution of a diffusion equation with a moving boundary. However, when the water is salty, the transport of salt rejected by ice introduces some interesting twists to the tale. A number of analytic models for the freezing of water are briefly reviewed, ranging from the famous work by Neumann and Stefan in the 1800s. to the mush zone models coming out of Cambridge and Oxford since the 1980s. The successes and limitations of these models, and remaining modelling issues, are considered in the case of freezing sea-water in the Arctic and Antarctic Oceans. A new, simple model which includes turbulent transport of heat and salt between ice and ocean is introduced and solved analytically, in two different cases-one where turbulence is given by a constant friction velocity, and the other where turbulence is buoyancy-driven and hence depends on ice thickness. Salt is found to play an important role, lowering interface temperatures, increasing oceanic heat flux, and slowing ice growth.
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Issue Date
2009
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

BOUNDARY-LAYER; SURFACE FLUXES; HEAT-FLUX; CONVECTION; SOLIDIFICATION; WINTER; ZONE

Citation

ANZIAM JOURNAL, v.50, no.3, pp.306 - 319

ISSN
1446-1811
DOI
10.1017/S1446181109000029
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/95710
Appears in Collection
RIMS Journal Papers
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