Repository logo
 

Grain growth of natural and synthetic ice at 0°C

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Change log

Abstract

Grain growth can modify the microstructure of natural ice, including the grain size and crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO). To better understand grain-growth processes and kinetics, we compared microstructural data from synthetic and natural ice samples of similar starting grain sizes that were annealed at the solidus temperature (0ºC) for durations of a few hours to 33 days. The synthetic ice has a homogeneous initial microstructure characterised by polygonal grains, little intragranular distortion, few bubbles, and a near-random CPO. The natural ice samples were sub-sampled from ice cores acquired from the Priestley Glacier, Antarctica. This natural ice has a heterogeneous microstructure characterised by a considerable number of air bubbles, widespread intragranular distortion, and a CPO. During annealing, the average grain size of the natural ice barely changes, whereas the average grain size of the synthetic ice gradually increases. These observations demonstrate that grain growth in natural ice can be much slower than in synthetic ice and therefore that the grain-growth law derived from synthetic ice cannot be directly applied to estimate the grain-size evolution in natural ice with a different microstructure. The microstructure of natural ice is characterised by many bubbles that pin grain boundaries. Previous studies suggest that bubble pinning provides a resisting force that reduces the effective driving force of grain-boundary migration and is therefore linked to the inhibition of grain growth observed in natural ice. As annealing progresses, the number density (number per unit area) of bubbles on grain boundaries in the natural ice decreases, whilst the number density of bubbles in the grain interiors increases. This observation indicates that some grain boundaries sweep through bubbles, which should weaken the pinning effect and thus reduce the resisting force for grain-boundary migration. Some of the Priestley ice grains become abnormally large during annealing. We speculate that the contrast of dislocation density amongst neighbouring grains, which favours the selected growth of grains with low dislocation densities, and bubble-pinning, which inhibits grain growth, are tightly associated with abnormal grain growth. The upper 10m of the Priestley ice core has a weaker CPO and better-developed second maximum than deeper samples. The similarity of this difference to the changes observed in annealing experiments suggests that abnormal grain growth may have occurred in the upper 10 m of the Priestley Glacier during summer warming.

Description

Journal Title

The Cryosphere

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1994-0416
1994-0424

Volume Title

Publisher

Copernicus Publications

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
MRC (MR/V021788/1)

Version History

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
VersionDateSummary
2*
2023-08-24 09:07:38
Published version created
2023-08-24 09:06:04
* Selected version