Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in a creeping solid with melting and freezing at either or both its horizontal boundaries
St\'ephane Labrosse, Adrien Morison, Renaud Deguen, Thierry, Alboussi\`ere

TL;DR
This paper investigates Rayleigh-Bénard convection with phase change boundaries, revealing how melting and freezing influence flow modes, critical thresholds, and heat transfer efficiency in planetary mantle analogs.
Contribution
It introduces a boundary condition model incorporating phase change effects and analyzes their impact on convection patterns and thresholds.
Findings
A non-deforming translation mode exists with critical Rayleigh number proportional to phase change timescale ratio.
Both deformation modes lead to highly efficient heat transfer at small phase change ratios.
Phase change boundaries significantly alter critical parameters and enhance heat transfer compared to classical conditions.
Abstract
Solid state convection can take place in the rocky or icy mantles of planetary objects and these mantles can be surrounded above or below or both by molten layers of similar composition. A flow toward the interface can proceed through it by changing phase. This behaviour is modeled by a boundary condition taking into account the competition between viscous stress in the solid, that builds topography of the interface with a timescale , and convective transfer of the latent heat in the liquid from places of the boundary where freezing occurs to places of melting, which acts to erase topography, with a timescale . The ratio controls whether the boundary condition is the classical non-penetrative one () or allows for a finite flow through the boundary (small ). We study Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in a plane…
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