Fingering convection in a spherical shell

Abstract

We use 120 three dimensional direct numerical simulations to study fingering convection in non-rotating spherical shells. We investigate the scaling behaviour of the flow lengthscale, mean velocity and transport of chemical composition over the fingering convection instability domain defined by 1RρLe1 \leq R_\rho \leq Le, RρR_\rho being the ratio of density perturbations of thermal and compositional origins. We show that the horizontal size of the fingers is accurately described by a scaling law of the form Lh/dRaT1/4(1γ)1/4/γ1/4\mathcal{L}_h/d \sim |Ra_T|^{-1/4} (1-\gamma)^{-1/4}/\gamma^{-1/4}, where dd is the shell depth, RaTRa_T the thermal Rayleigh number and γ\gamma the flux ratio. Scaling laws for mean velocity and chemical transport are derived in two asymptotic regimes close to the two edges of the instability domain, namely RρLeR_\rho \lesssim Le and Rρ1R_\rho \gtrsim 1. For the former, we show that the transport follows power laws of a small parameter ϵ\epsilon^\star measuring the distance to onset. For the latter, we find that the Sherwood number ShSh, which quantities the chemical transport, gradually approaches a scaling ShRaξ1/3Sh\sim Ra_\xi^{1/3} when Raξ1Ra_\xi \gg 1; and that the P\'eclet number accordingly follows PeRaξ2/3RaT1/4Pe \sim Ra_\xi^{2/3} |Ra_T|^{-1/4}, RaξRa_\xi being the chemical Rayleigh number. When the Reynolds number exceeds a few tens, a secondary instability may occur taking the form of large-scale toroidal jets. Jets distort the fingers resulting in Reynolds stress correlations, which in turn feed the jet growth until saturation. This nonlinear phenomenon can yield relaxation oscillation cycles.Comment: 43 pages, 22 figures, 3 tables, submitted to JF

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