4.1 Article

A Computational Fluid Dynamics Model for the Small-Scale Dynamics of Wave, Ice Floe and Interstitial Grease Ice Interaction

Journal

FLUIDS
Volume 6, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/fluids6050176

Keywords

sea ice dynamics; wave-ice interaction; marginal ice zone; sea ice rheology; pancake ice; grease ice

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of South Africa [104839, 105858, 118745]
  2. South African National Antarctic Programme
  3. ACE Foundation-Ferring Pharmaceuticals
  4. Australian Antarctic Science Program [4434]
  5. Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science [PE19055]

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The study suggests that finer-scale modeling is needed to address the mechanical properties of sea ice and wave-ice interaction in the marginal ice zone. Results indicate that the difference between domain-averaged temporal stress and strain rate evolutions increases with decreasing wave period. Additionally, the variability of ice floe shape and diameter significantly affects strain rate and viscosity.
The marginal ice zone is a highly dynamical region where sea ice and ocean waves interact. Large-scale sea ice models only compute domain-averaged responses. As the majority of the marginal ice zone consists of mobile ice floes surrounded by grease ice, finer-scale modelling is needed to resolve variations of its mechanical properties, wave-induced pressure gradients and drag forces acting on the ice floes. A novel computational fluid dynamics approach is presented that considers the heterogeneous sea ice material composition and accounts for the wave-ice interaction dynamics. Results show, after comparing three realistic sea ice layouts with similar concentration and floe diameter, that the discrepancy between the domain-averaged temporal stress and strain rate evolutions increases for decreasing wave period. Furthermore, strain rate and viscosity are mostly affected by the variability of ice floe shape and diameter.

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