Brinicles as a case of inverse chemical gardens
Julyan H. E. Cartwright, Bruno Escribano, Diego L. Gonz\'alez, C., Ignacio Sainz-D\'iaz, and Idan Tuval

TL;DR
Brinicles are natural ice tubes formed by a process similar to chemical gardens, involving osmotic pressure and freezing, representing an inverse form of these self-assembled structures.
Contribution
This paper demonstrates that brinicles can be understood as inverse chemical gardens, linking natural ice formation to self-assembled tubular precipitation structures.
Findings
Brinicles form through osmotic pressure-driven freezing in polar seas.
They are analogous to chemical gardens but grow downwards as inverse structures.
The process involves a siphon pump mechanism driven by freezing and brine drainage.
Abstract
Brinicles are hollow tubes of ice from centimetres to metres in length that form under floating sea ice in the polar oceans when dense, cold brine drains downwards from sea ice into sea water close to its freezing point. When this extremely cold brine leaves the ice it freezes the water it comes into contact with; a hollow tube of ice --- a brinicle --- growing downwards around the plume of descending brine. We show that brinicles can be understood as a form of the self-assembled tubular precipitation structures termed chemical gardens, plant-like structures formed on placing together a soluble metal salt, often in the form of a seed crystal, and an aqueous solution of one of many anions, often silicate. On one hand, in the case of classical chemical gardens, an osmotic pressure difference across a semipermeable precipitation membrane that filters solutions by rejecting the solute leads…
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