论文标题
海冰单向生长期间基底和边缘平面界面不稳定性的原位比较
In-situ comparison of interface instability of basal and edge planes during unidirectional growth of sea ice
论文作者
论文摘要
冰的独特各向异性从基本和应用的观点赋予了海冰的一个特殊而有吸引力的主题。冰的边缘和基础平面之间的独特生长行为是冰生长的核心主题之一。单向冻结模式源于基底和边缘平面的扰动。迄今为止,没有直接比较基础和边缘平面冰之间的单向冻结行为。在这里,我们原地研究了平面不稳定性以及冰的基础和边缘平面的单向冻结模式,该模式是在NACL溶液中使用指定的冰取向的平行冷冻样品设计为建模的海水。平面不稳定性是通过中性稳定性曲线与基础和边缘平面冰的表面张力各向异性讨论的。我们第一次认识到在相同的冰冻条件下同时观察基底和边缘平面冰的固体/液体界面。结果表明,边缘平面冰的平面不稳定性比基础平面冰更快。延时观测证实了基础和边缘平面冰之间扰动的短暂竞争相互作用,这是通过冰层基底和边缘平面扰动的各向异性生长来解释的。这些实验结果提供了单向生长海冰的形态演变与不同的冰向方向之间的联系,并建议丰富我们对海冰生长的理解以及其他各向异性材料的结晶模式。
The unique anisotropy of ice has endowed sea ice growth a peculiar and attractive subject from both fundamental and applied viewpoints. The distinct growth behaviors between edge and basal plane of ice are one of the central topics in ice growth. And the unidirectional freezing pattern stems from perturbations of both basal and edge planes. To date there is no direct comparison of unidirectional freezing behavior between basal and edge plane ice. Here, we in-situ investigate the planar instability as well as the unidirectional freezing pattern of basal and edge planes of ice by a design of parallel freezing samples with specified ice orientations in a NaCl solution as a modeled sea water. The planar instability is discussed via neutral stability curves with surface tension anisotropy for both basal and edge plane ice. For the first time, we realize the simultaneous observation of solid/liquid interfaces of basal and edge plane ice under the same set of freezing conditions. The results show that planar instability occurs faster for edge plane ice than basal plane ice. The time-lapse observations confirm a transient competitive interaction of perturbations between the basal and edge planes ice, which is explained by the anisotropic growth of perturbations in basal and edge planes of ice. These experimental results provide a link between morphology evolution of unidirectional grown sea ice and different ice orientations and are suggested to enrich our understanding of sea ice growth as well as crystallization pattern of other anisotropic materials.