Wave formation and heat transfer at an ice-water interface in the presence of a turbulent flow
- 11 July 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Fluid Mechanics
- Vol. 99 (3) , 619-640
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022112080000791
Abstract
Under some conditions of temperature and flow an ice-water interface in the presence of a turbulent stream has been observed to be unstable. In this paper the source and the conditions for the instability were investigated for a well-defined turbulent boundary-layer flow. It was found that the instability resulted from the interaction that occurs between a wavy surface and a turbulent flow over it. Such an interaction results in a heat transfer variation which is 90 to 180 degrees out of phase with the surface wave shape – a result which is consistent with the calculations of Thorsness & Hanratty (1979a,b).The main factor controlling damping of the instability at an ice-water interface was found to be the rate at which heat is conducted away from the interface into the ice.In the past it has been found that when an ice layer is melting, that is when the heat conduction in the ice is small, the ice surface is highly unstable. In the present study it was found that for a sufficiently large temperature ratio (Tf−Tw)/(T∞−Tf), a steady-state ice layer is also unstable. Furthermore it is predicted, from the present observations, that a growing ice layer with a ratio of ice-side to water-side heat fluxes of up to 2.3 could be unstable.Under sufficiently unstable conditions waves on the ice surface grow to an amplitude at which flow separations occur near the wave crests. This results in a ‘rippled’ ice surface pattern very similar to the patterns observed on mobile bed surfaces (Kennedy 1969) or surfaces which are being dissolved into a flowing stream (Allen 1971). The development of a ‘rippled’ ice surface results in a very substantial increase in the mean heat-transfer rate which would have an important influence on predictions of ice formation in the presence of a turbulent stream.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- The steady state ice layer profile on a constant temperature plate in a forced convection flow—II. The transition and turbulent regimesInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1979
- The steady state ice layer profile on a constant temperature plate in a forced convection flow—I. Laminar regimeInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1979
- Influence of the amplitude of a solid wavy wall on a turbulent flow. Part 1. Non-separated flowsJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1977
- Observations of Crosshatched Wave Patterns in Liquid FilmsAIAA Journal, 1972
- Heat transfer at a melting flat surface under conditions of forced convection and laminar boundary layerInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1970
- The turbulent boundary layer over a wall with progressive surface wavesJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1970
- An analytical solution for solidification of a moving warm liquid onto an isothermal cold wallInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1969
- Influence of heat transfer on melting and solidification in forced flowInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1969
- Freezing of fluids in forced flowInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1967
- Heat conduction with solidification and a convective boundary condition at the freezing frontInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1966