New Layer Thickness Parameterization of Diffusive Convection

ORAL

Abstract

Double-diffusion convection is one of the most important non-mechanically driven mixing processes. Its importance has been particular recognized in oceanography, material science, geology, and planetary physics. Double-diffusion occurs in a fluid in which there are gradients of two (or more) properties with different molecular diffusivities and of opposing effects on the vertical density distribution. It has two primary modes: salt finger and diffusive convection. Recently, the importance of diffusive convection has aroused more interest due to its impact to the diapycnal mixing in the interior ocean and the ice and the ice-melting in the Arctic and Antarctic Oceans. In our recent work, we constructed a length scale of energy-containing eddy and proposed a new layer thickness parameterization of diffusive convection by using the laboratory experiment and in situ observations in the lakes and oceans. The new parameterization can well describe the laboratory convecting layer thicknesses (0.01\textasciitilde 0.1 m) and those observed in oceans and lakes (0.1\textasciitilde 1000 m).

*This work was supported by China NSF grants (41476167,41406035 and 41176027), NSF of Guangdong Province, China (2016A030311042) and the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA11030302).

Authors

  • Sheng-Qi Zhou

    • State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, China
  • Yuan-Zheng Lu

    • State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, China
  • Shuang-Xi Guo

    • State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, China
  • Xue-Long Song

    • School of Marine Information Engineering, Guilin University of Electronic Technology, China
  • Ling Qu

    • State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, China
  • Xian-Rong Cen

    • State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, China
  • Ilker Fer

    • Geophysical Institute, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway