The formation and evolution of layered structures in porous media: effects of porosity and mechanical dispersion

Stan Schoofs, Ron A. Trompert, Ulrich Hansen
2000 Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors  
Horizontally layered structures can develop in porous or partially molten environments, such as hydrothermal systems, magmatic intrusions and the early Earth's mantle. The porosity f of these natural environments is typically small. Since dissolved chemical elements unlike heat cannot diffuse through the solid rocks, heat and solute influence the interstitial fluid density in a different manner: heat advects slower than solute through the liquid by the factor f, while diffusion of heat through
more » ... he bulk porous medium is larger by the factor f y1 times the ratio between the thermal and chemical diffusivities. By performing numerical experiments in which a rigid low-porosity medium is heated from below, we have studied the formation and evolution of layers in an initially stably stratified liquid. Growth of a convective layer through convective entrainment, the formation of a stable density interface on top of the layer and destabilization of the next layer are intimately Ž . Ž . linked. By monitoring the heat solute fluxes, it is observed that the transport of heat solute across the interface changes Ž . from convective entrainment towards a regime in which transfer is purely diffusive dispersive . Because this transition occurs before the stage at which the lower layer arrives at the thermal equilibrium, we conclude that the layer growth stops when the density interface on top has grown sufficiently strong to keep the ascending plumes in the lower layer from convectively entraining more fluid from above. A simple balance between the most important forces, exerted on a fluid parcel in the lower layer, is proposed to determine this transition. This force balance also indicates whether a density interface keeps intact, migrates upwards or breaks down during the further evolution of the layered sequence. Finally, mechanical dispersion tends to increase transport of chemically dissolved elements across the density interface. Since this reduces the density difference between the two adjacent layers, the thickness of the lower layer increases. q 0031-9201r00r$ -see front matter q 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Ž . PII: S 0 0 3 1 -9 2 0 1 9 9 0 0 1 4 8 -X ( ) S. Schoofs et al.r
doi:10.1016/s0031-9201(99)00148-x fatcat:n7yel5fafrhghoxlyu2ypb26mq