Abstract

Abstract. The incorporation of vapor transport has become a key demand for snowpack modeling in which accompanied phase changes give rise to a new, nonlinear coupling in the heat and mass equations. This coupling has an impact on choosing efficient numerical schemes for 1D snowpack models which are naturally not designed to cope with mathematical particularities of arbitrary, nonlinear partial differential equations (PDEs). To explore this coupling we have implemented a stand-alone finite element solution of the coupled heat and mass equations in snow using the computing platform FEniCS. We focus on the nonlinear feedback of the ice phase exchanging mass with a diffusing vapor phase with concurrent heat transport in the absence of settling. We demonstrate that existing continuum-mechanical models derived through homogenization or mixture theory yield similar results for homogeneous snowpacks of constant density. When snow density varies significantly with depth, we show that phase changes in the presence of temperature gradients give rise to nonlinear advection of the ice phase amplifying existing density variations. Eventually, this advection triggers a wave instability in the continuity equations. This is traced back to the density dependence of the effective transport coefficients as revealed by a linear stability analysis of the nonlinear PDE system. The instability is an inherent feature of existing continuum models and predicts, as a side product, the formation of a low-density (mechanical) weak layer on the sublimating side of an ice crust. The wave instability constitutes a key challenge for a faithful treatment of solid–vapor mass conservation between layers, which is discussed in view of the underlying homogenization schemes and their numerical solutions.

Highlights

  • Neglecting vapor transport in the pore space of a snowpack for the overall mass balance is considered as a serious uncertainty in snow modeling

  • What happens if the derived equations contain mathematical features on smaller scales which violate the separation of scales? We have shown that the wave instability produces patterns on millimeter to sub-millimeter scales requiring ridiculously small mesh sizes to resolve them, clearly interfering with characteristic length scales of the microstructure

  • We have shown that the widely accepted form of homogenized vapor transport equations in snow predicts mathematical features with interesting physical implications which constitute a considerable numerical challenge for future snowpack modeling

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Summary

Introduction

Neglecting vapor transport in the pore space of a snowpack for the overall mass balance is considered as a serious uncertainty in snow modeling. Persistent temperature gradients throughout the season may contribute to the depletion of snow density at the bottom of the snowpack due to upward vapor fluxes, as has been hypothesized for shallow tundra snowpacks by Barrere et al (2017) and Domine et al (2016). This problem is relevant for applications, for example, in permafrost where temperature gradients may induce the drying of soils with a feedback on snow metamorphism in the adjacent bottom layer (Domine et al, 2016), in turn affecting the ground thermal regime. The equations were re-derived from a rigorous two-scale expan-

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