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 1≤Rρ≤Le, Rρ 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/d∼∣RaT∣−1/4(1−γ)−1/4/γ−1/4, where d is the shell depth,
RaT the thermal Rayleigh number and γ 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 Rρ≲Le
and Rρ≳1. For the former, we show that the transport follows
power laws of a small parameter ϵ⋆ measuring the distance to
onset. For the latter, we find that the Sherwood number Sh, which quantities
the chemical transport, gradually approaches a scaling Sh∼Raξ1/3
when Raξ≫1; and that the P\'eclet number accordingly follows Pe∼Raξ2/3∣RaT∣−1/4, Raξ 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