1. Introduction
Sea ice is a complex, composite material consisting of pure ice with brine and air inclusions, whose size and geometry depend on the ice-crystal structure, as well as the temperature and bulk salinity. An interesting feature of sea ice, known to the earliest polar explorers, is its tendency to desalinate with time. Efforts to understand this fundamental process have led to many important discoveries about the microstructure and the dynamics of the brine phase (Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley, 1982). The dominant desalination mechanism has been found to be gravity drainage (Reference Kingery, Goodnow and KingeryKingery and Goodnow, 1963; Reference UntersteinerUntersteiner, 1968; Reference Cox and WeeksCox and Weeks, 1975; Reference Eide and MartinEide and Martin, 1975; Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley, 1982). As an ice sheet grows, its surface rises higher above sea level, producing a pressure head in the interconnected brine system, driving the underlying brine out of the ice (Reference Eide and MartinEide and Martin, 1975; Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley, 1982). In the presence of a temperature profile which increases with depth, an unstable density distribution exists within the brine, producing convective overturning, as well as an exchange between denser brine within the ice and the underlying sea water (Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley, 1982). The input of brine into the upper ocean is important in ice-ocean interactions, through modification of the density of the surface layer, induction of thermohaline convection, and contributing to the formation of bottom water (Reference Carmack and UntersteinerCarmack, 1986; Reference EickenEicken, 1992b). The drainage channels which facilitate brine transport have been studied in numerous works (e.g. Reference Lake and LewisLake and Lewis, 1970; Reference MartinMartin, 1974; Reference Eide and MartinEide and Martin, 1975; Reference Niedrauer and MartinNiedrauer and Martin, 1979; Reference Cole and ShapiroCole and Shapiro, 1998). They consist of large, vertical tubular drainage structures attended by smaller tributaries, like a vertically oriented, radially symmetric river system (Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley, 1982).
One of the key findings which has resulted from the study of the desalination process is that for brine-volume fractions p below a critical value pc ≈ 5%, columnar sea ice is effectively impermeable to fluid transport, whereas for p above pc, brine or sea water can move through the ice. The relation of brine volume to temperature T and salinity S (Reference Frankenstein and GarnerFrankenstein and Garner, 1967) implies pc corresponds to a critical temperature Tc ≈ −5°C for S = 5 ppt; we refer to this critical behavior as the "law of fives". Perhaps its clearest demonstration in early works appears in Reference Cox and WeeksCox and Weeks (1975) and Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley (1982), where the rate of change of salinity dS/dt due to gravity drainage is plotted against brine volume. For brine volumes below roughly 5%, dS/dt vanishes. Indeed, Reference Ono and KasaiOno and Kasai (1985) found that the downward permeability of thin sea ice decreases by over two orders of magnitude as the surface temperature is lowered, in a small neighborhood of −5°C.
Brine transport is fundamental to such processes as sea-ice production through freezing of flooded ice surfaces (Reference Ackley, Lytle, Kuehn, Golden and DarlingAckley and others, 1995), the enhancement of thermal fluxes through sea ice (Reference Lytle and AckleyLytle and Ackley, 1996; Reference TrodahlTrodahl and others, 2000), nutrient replenishment for sea-ice algal communities (Reference Fritsen, Lytle, Ackley and SullivanFritsen and others, 1994) and to remote sensing (Reference Hosseinmostafa, Lytle, Jezek, Gogineni, Ackley and MooreHosseinmostafa and others, 1995; Reference Lytle and GoldenLytle and Golden, 1995; Reference Golden, Papanicolaou and ChandraGolden, 1997c). However, until recently the basic transition controlling brine transport has received little attention. Percolation theory (Reference Broadbent and HammersleyBroadbent and Hammersley, 1957; Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992) has been developed to analyze the properties of materials where connectedness of a given component determines the bulk behavior. Recently we have shown (Reference Golden, Ackley and LytleGolden and others, 1998c) that it provides a natural framework to understand the critical behavior of sea ice. In particular, we applied a compressed-powder percolation model to sea-ice microstructure that explains the law of fives, the observed behavior (Reference Ono and KasaiOno and Kasai, 1985) of the fluid permeability in the critical temperature regime, as well as data on surface flooding collected recently on sea ice in the Weddell Sea and East Antarctic regions.
Other examples of brine percolation and transport include the observation in the Arctic (Reference Hudier, Ingram and ShirasawaHudier and others, 1995) that a snowstorm and its resultant loading can induce a complete upward flushing of the brine network. The freezing of a surface slush layer, with resultant brine drainage, was observed in the Antarctic to induce convection within the ice, whereby rejected dense brine is replaced by nutrient-rich sea water from the upper ocean (Reference Lytle and AckleyLytle and Ackley, 1996), fueling autumn blooms of algae in second-year ice (Reference Fritsen, Lytle, Ackley and SullivanFritsen and others, 1994). During the autumn freeze-up, this process provided about 70% of the salt flux into the upper ocean and increased the total heat flux through the overlying ice and snow cover. The proliferation and growth of sea-ice organisms is favored by permeable ice which allows nutrient replenishment (Reference Dieckmann, Lange, Ackley and JenningsDieckmann and others, 1991; Reference EickenEicken, 1992a). As yet another example, it was observed in the Arctic that there was about a 20 day time lag between the onset of spring snow-melt and the input of fresh water into the mixed layer (personal communication from M. G. McPhee, 1995; Reference Maykut and McPheeMaykut and McPhee, 1995). Presumably, part of this lag was the time it took for the ice sheet to warm to above the critical temperature to allow drainage out of the ice (personal communication from M. G. McPhee, 1995).
For remote sensing, surface flooding and subsequent freezing can affect microwave backscatter from sea ice (Reference Hosseinmostafa, Lytle, Jezek, Gogineni, Ackley and MooreHosseinmostafa and others, 1995, Reference Lytle and GoldenLytle and Golden, 1995), and this surface flooding is often controlled by percolation processes. Moreover, the connectedness of the brine inclusions, as well as their volume fraction and geometry, affects the complex permittivity e* of sea ice, which determines how electromagnetic waves are scattered from and propagate through the ice. We review a series of rigorous bounds on the effective complex permittivity e* of sea ice, treated as a general two- (or three-)component random medium (Reference GoldenGolden, 1995a, Reference Golden, Papanicolaou and Chandra1997c; Reference Sawicz and GoldenSawicz and Golden, 1995; Reference GoldenGolden and others, 1998a). Using the bounds, we explore how the connectedness properties of the brine phase, as well as volume fraction and other geometrical characteristics, affect ϵ*. We also briefly discuss our recent work in obtaining geometrical information about the brine phase, such as volume fraction and inclusion separation, through electromagnetic inversion (Reference Cherkaeva and GoldenCherkaeva and Golden, 1998; Reference GoldenGolden and others, 1998b).
Finally, we discuss measurements of percolation in first-year sea ice in the Mertz Glacier polynya, Antarctica: the areal density of brine tubes extending to the surface during some warm episodes, and the penetration of a staining liquid (beet juice) through the brine structures in extracted sea-ice blocks to better expose their geometrical properties.
2. Percolation and the Fluid Permeability of Sea Ice
Percolation theory (Reference Broadbent and HammersleyBroadbent and Hammersley, 1957; Reference GrimmettGrimmett, 1989; Reference Bunde and HavlinBunde and Havlin, 1991; Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992) was initiated by Reference Broadbent and HammersleyBroadbent and Hammersley (1957) with the introduction of a simple lattice model to study the flow of air through permeable sandstones used in miners’ gas masks. In subsequent decades, this theory has been used to successfully model a broad array of disordered materials and processes, including flow in porous media like rocks and soils (Reference Berkowitz and BalbergBerkowitz and Balberg, 1993; Reference SahimiSahimi, 1995), fractures (Reference Herrmann, Bunde and HavlinHermann, 1991), doped semiconductors (Reference Shklovskii and EfrosShklovskii and Efros, 1984) and various types of disordered conductors (Reference Clerc, Giraud, Laugier and LuckClerc and others, 1990; Reference Bergman and StroudBergman and Stroud, 1992) like piezoresistors, thermistors (Reference Mclachlan, Blaszkiewicz and NewnhamMclachlan and others, 1990), radarabsorbing composites (Reference PriouPriou, 1992), thin metal films (Reference Davis, McKenzie and McPhedranDavis and others, 1991) and polar firn (Reference Shabtaie and BentleyShabtaie and Bentley, 1994). The original percolation model and its generalizations have been the subject of intensive theoretical investigations, particularly in the physics (Reference Bunde and HavlinBunde and Havlin, 1991; Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992) and mathematics (Reference KestenKesten, 1982; Reference GrimmettGrimmett, 1989) communities. One reason for the broad interest in the percolation model is that it is perhaps the simplest purely probabilistic model which exhibits a type of phase transition.
The simplest form of the lattice percolation model (Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992) is defined as follows. Consider the d-dimensional integer lattice zd, and the square (or cubic) network of bonds joining nearest-neighbor lattice sites. To each bond, with probability p 0 ≤ p ≤ 1, we assign a 1, meaning it is open, and with probability 1 −p we assign a 0, meaning it is closed. Groups of connected open bonds are called open clusters, and the size of a cluster is just the number of open bonds it contains. In the percolation model there is a critical probability pc , 0 < pc < 1, called the percolation threshold, at which the average cluster size diverges and an infinite cluster appears, so that the open bonds percolate. In two dimensions pc = 0.5, and in three pc ≈ 0.25. Typical open-cluster configurations in d = 2 for p = 1β and p = 2β are shown in Figure 1. For p ≥ pc, the infinite-cluster density p∞(p), defined as the probability that the origin (or any point, by translation invariance) is contained in the infinite cluster, or p∞(p) = lim m∞(l,p)/ld, where m∞(l,p) is the mass of the infinite cluster contained in a box of side l. At the percolation threshold, the infinite cluster has a self-similar, fractal structure, with m∞(l,pc) ∼ ldf as l → ∞, where df ≤ d is the fractal dimension. In two dimensions df = 91/48 ≈ 1.9 is a conjectured exact result, and df ≈ 2.5 in three dimensions (Reference Bunde and HavlinBunde and Havlin, 1991; Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992). The graph of P∞ (p) for d = 2 is shown in Figure 2. In the neighborhood of pc, with p ≥ pc, P∞ (p) is believed to exhibit the scaling behavior
where β is the percolation critical exponent, which satisfies β ≤ 1 (Reference Chayes and ChayesChayes and Chayes, 1986b), and in d = 2 it is conjectured that β = 5β6 (Reference Bunde and HavlinBunde and Havlin, 1991).
The percolation model deals only with the geometrical aspects of connectedness in disordered media, yet we are interested in the transport properties as well. Then we consider a random resistor network, where the bonds are assigned the conductivities a = 1 and a = h > 0 with probabilities p and 1 −p . With h = 0, the effective conductivity σ*(p), defined via Kirchoff’s laws, vanishes for p < pc, σ*(p) = 0 (for a rigorous formulation of both the lattice and continuum problems see Reference Golden and PapanicolaouGolden and Papanicolaou, 1983; Reference GoldenGolden, 1992; or see section 3 below for a brief treatment of the continuum case). Near the threshold with p > pc, a* (p) > 0 is believed to exhibit the power-law behavior
where t is the conductivity critical exponent, with 1 ≤ t ≤ 2 in d = 2, 3 (Reference GoldenGolden, 1990, Reference Golden1992, Reference Golden and Hornung1997d), and numerical values t ≈ 1.3 in d = 2 and t ≈ 2.0 in d = 3 (Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992). The effective conductivity σ* (p) in the d = 2 lattice case is shown in Figure 1. Analogously we may consider a random pipe network with effective fluid permeability k*(p) exhibiting similar behavior k* (p) ∼ (p- pc)e, where e is the permeability critical exponent, with e = t (Reference Chayes and ChayesChayes and Chayes, 1986a; Reference SahimiSahimi, 1995; Reference Golden and HornungGolden, 1997d). Critical exponents characterizing the behavior of transport near pc include t, 6 and 7 defined by
and a spectral "gap" exponent A. Such exponents, like t, are generally believed to exhibit universality, meaning that they depend only on dimension and not on the type of lattice, although continuum models can exhibit non-universal behavior, with exponent values different from the lattice case. For example, consider the Swiss-cheese model in d = 2, where circular discs (or spheres in d = 3) are removed at random from a uniform medium of unit (electrical or fluid) conductivity (Reference KersteinKerstein, 1983; Reference Halperin, Feng and SenHalperin and others, 1985; Reference Feng, Halperin and SenFeng and others, 1987; Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992; Reference SahimiSahimi, 1994). Near the percolation threshold, the transport properties are dominated by flow through the narrow necks between non-overlapping discs (or spheres). Since the widths of such necks can vary throughout the system, there is a distribution of bond conductivities a in an equivalent Voronoi network model (Reference KersteinKerstein, 1983). Moreover, this distribution is singular near a = 0, which can lead to violations of universality with values of the transport critical exponents in d = 3 higher than for the lattice case, and e ≠ t (Reference Halperin, Feng and SenHalperin and others, 1985; Reference Feng, Halperin and SenFeng and others, 1987).
While the critical exponents for continuum systems might differ from their lattice counterparts, we have recently proven that t, 6, 7 and A for both lattice and continuum models satisfy the same equations, or scaling relations, and that these equations are the same as those satisfied by the analogous exponents from the theory of phase transitions in statistical mechanics (Reference GoldenGolden, 1997a). Our results are based on a direct, analytic connection we have found between transport coefficients for two-component random media in lattice or continuum settings, such as the effective conductivity, permittivity, diffusivity or fluid permeability, and the order parameters in statistical mechanical models, such as the magnetization m of an Ising ferromagnet. This connection establishes the virtual equivalence of a transport transition at a percolation threshold, and a phase transition in statistical mechanics such as the Curie point of a ferromagnet or a liquid/solid transition, through shared Stieltjes integral representations for the coefficients in the two problems, and the introduction of a partition function and free energy associated with a given composite microstructure (Reference GoldenGolden, 1995b).
If the above classical lattice percolation model is applied to sea ice, where the open bonds represent brine and the closed bonds represent ice, then pc would be about 25% in d = 3, which is much larger than the observed 5%. Even continuum models, such as ellipsoidal brine inclusions randomly distributed in an ice host, a commonly used model for sea ice, exhibit critical volume fractions in the 20−40% range (Reference DeBondt, Froyen and DeruyttereDeBondt and others, 1992). Instead consider the critical behavior of composites made up of conducting particles suspended in an insulating matrix (Reference Mclachlan, Blaszkiewicz and NewnhamMclachlan and others, 1990), and the problem of finding microstructures that reduce pc. For some flexible polymer composites designed to be highly conducting, it was found that by compacting powders oflarge polymer particles with much smaller metal particles, low critical-volume fractions of the (more expensive) metal particles are required to significantly lower the resistance of the composite (Reference Kusy and TurnerKusy and Turner, 1971; Reference Malliaris and TurnerMalliaris and Turner, 1971). The resulting microstructure of such compressed powders is strikingly similar to the cellular microstructure of columnar sea ice, as shown in Figure 2. The key parameter in predicting the conduction threshold for compressed powders is the ratio ξ = rp/rm of the radii of the large polymer particles to the smaller metal particles (Reference Malliaris and TurnerMalliaris and Turner, 1971; Reference KusyKusy, 1977). An approximate formula for the critical-volume fraction for percolation of the small metal spheres in a compressed powder is given by
where φ is a reciprocal planar packing factor, and xc is a critical surface-area fraction of the larger particles which must be covered for percolation by the smaller particles (Reference KusyKusy, 1977). Values based on microstructural analysis giving good agreement with conductivity experiments are xc = 0.42 and </> = 1.27 (which we use also as a reasonable approximation for sea ice). An alternative approach to approximating pc which yields similar quantitative results can be found in Reference JanzenJanzen (1975, Reference Janzen1980). For large ξ, pc is not very sensitive to the exact value of ξ For example, a range of 44−17 in ξ gives only a range of 3−7% in pc. Using photomicrographs of sea-ice microstructure and typical brine-inclusion sizes (Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley 1982), we measured the corresponding parameter for sea ice, obtaining an average of ξ ≈ 24. Applying the compressed-powder percolation model (Reference KusyKusy, 1977) yields a critical brine volume for columnar sea ice of about 5%. This result will vary with ice-crystal structure. For example, the slightly higher values of pc (lower 0 observed in Reference Ono and KasaiOno and Kasai (1985) are caused by the more random distributions of brine inclusions in granular ice as compared to columnar ice. The compressed-powder model explains why sea ice exhibits such low values for pc, as compared to the 20−40% range one might expect, and provides reasonable estimates for pc , which depends only on the geometry of the two phases. Observations show, however, that fluid transport then proceeds primarily through large-diameter brine channels (Reference Weeks and AckleyWeeks and Ackley, 1982; Reference Fritsen, Lytle, Ackley and SullivanFritsen and others, 1994; Reference Lytle and AckleyLytle and Ackley, 1996). Dynamic models will likely be needed for analysis of brine-channel formation beyond the initial onset of percolation at pC) although it is interesting to note the existence of the "independent crossings" of a sample in standard percolation models (Reference Chayes and ChayesChayes and Chayes, 1986a). They have large separations in comparison to the microstructural (or lattice-spacing) scale for p near pc, on the order of a correlation length (Reference Bunde and HavlinBunde and Havhn, 1991; Reference Stauffer and AharonyStauffer and Aharony, 1992), and play much the same role for transport as the brine channels.
Comparison of the electrical conductivity of compressed powders and the fluid permeability of sea ice in Figure 3 shows that near the critical temperature, sea-ice permeability displays the same characteristic behavior exhibited in general by transport coefficients of composite media near a percolation threshold (Reference Mclachlan, Blaszkiewicz and NewnhamMclachlan and others, 1990; Reference DeBondt, Froyen and DeruyttereDeBondt and others, 1992). The data in Figure 3b are thus best fit not with a straight line as in Reference Ono and KasaiOno and Kasai (1985) but with an "S" curve that captures the actual behavior of κ(T) in the critical regime near the percolation threshold
Compressed powders with low pc exhibit large, non-universal values oft ranging between 2 and 7 (Reference Mclachlan, Blaszkiewicz and NewnhamMclachlan and others, 1990). A rough estimate for the fluid-permeability critical exponent e for sea ice based on the data in Figure 3b is about 2.5, although there is significant uncertainty in this estimate (but e is probably 2−4). Given that for lattice models we have shown in d = 3 that e = t < 2 (Reference GoldenGolden, 1990, Reference Golden1992), it is likely that sea ice exhibits non-universal behavior, perhaps indicating the importance of the very small necks through which brine must flow near the percolation threshold. Much more experimental work needs to be done to determine the actual range of e, how it depends on the type of sea ice and other factors, and if indeed the behavior is non-universal.
Data collected on Antarctic sea ice directly demonstrate the significance of the percolation threshold. During the winter ANZFLUX experiment (Reference McPheeMcPhee and others, 1996) in the eastern Weddell Sea, we encountered a thin ice pack, typically 20−60 cm thick. Unusually large vertical oceanic heat fluxes resulted in ice basal melt rates of up to 3 cm d−1 (average was 1 cm d−1) which could have melted the ice in a short period. The persistence of the ice depended on flooding of the surface and the subsequent freezing of this slushy snow/brine mixture to form snow ice, which replaced the ice melting on the bottom (Reference Ackley, Lytle, Kuehn, Golden and DarlingAckley and others, 1995). The surface flooding was controlled by upward brine percolation. Temperature profiles measured hourly during a 5 day drift camp over Maud Rise at about 65° S, 4° E (Fig. 4) indicated that while most of the sea-ice layer remained above the critical temperature for percolation, the top 5 cm or so of the sea ice was impermeable, except during the typically warm storms. Sufficient loading led to surface flooding, which subsequently froze. This cyclic process occurred twice during the 5 day drift. The impermeable layer, defined by temperatures below a critical temperature of about −5.3°C, disappeared with the onset of the first storm during day of year 216 (4 August 1994). For about a day the entire ice sheet was permeable, and by noon of the next day we observed a thick layer of slushy snow consisting of 30−50% liquid brine. Subsequently, a cold period set in, the slush froze and the impermeable cap returned as the frozen slush. Then another storm moved in, with resultant warming, flooding and freezing. Late in the evening of day 219 during a warm storm, we observed large "boils" on the snow surface, which were apparently brine percolating up through the ice.
A similar type of flooding event was observed during the winter HIHO HIHO experiment (Reference Lytle, Massom, Bindoff, Worby and AllisonLytle and others, 2000) in the East Antarctic sea-ice pack at about 65° S, 145° E. The data, which are discussed in Reference Golden, Ackley and LytleGolden and others (1998c), demonstrate clearly that an air-temperature increase alone can cause the permeability phase transition.
As a final example, consider the algae bloom observed in a porous sea-ice layer at depth 10−30 cm during autumn 1992 in the western Weddell Sea (Reference Fritsen, Lytle, Ackley and SullivanFritsen and others, 1994). From day of year 60 (29 February) to day 81 standing stocks of pigments in the ice were increasing at a rate of 0.8 mg m−1 d−1, yet after day 81 the algal growth rate was reduced to one-tenth the earlier value. Day 81 is when the downward advancing critical isotherm of tc ≈ −4°C passed through the bottom of the algal layer, effectively cutting off the community from significant nutrient replenishment, as ice above this isotherm was impermeable. The critical temperature higher than −5°C is understood by noting that the ice surrounding the algal layer was granular, and has a higher pc, yet a salinity of only about 5 ppt.
It has been demonstrated that sea ice exhibits a percolation transition at a critical temperature. As mentioned above, recently it has been found that this type of behavior in composite materials is mathematically analogous to a phase transition in statistical mechanics, like water at its freezing point or a ferromagnet at its Curie point (Reference GoldenGolden, 1997a). Thus tc may be viewed as a type of phase-transition point, with sea ice at temperatures between tc and −1.8°C (the freezing point for sea water) being a hybrid phase between liquid and solid.
3. Percolation and the Complex Permittivity of Sea Ice
When electromagnetic waves interact with random media or surfaces, a key parameter determining the nature of the interaction and the types of analysis which can be used is the ratio ζ/λ, where ζis an appropriate measure of the length scale of variations in the medium or surface, and A is wavelength. For example, at C-band with frequency / = 5.3 GHz and free-space wavelength A0 = 5.7 cm, the wavelength Asi in sea ice, typically satisfying λ0/2 < λsi < λ0, is much larger than the sub-millimeter scale of variations in the brine microstructure. In this case, the wave cannot resolve the details of this random inclusion microstructure, and the behavior of the wave is determined primarily by an effective, or homogenized, complex permittivity e*, which is a complicated (tensor) function of the permittivities of the constituents of sea ice and the geometry of the microstructure, as well as frequency. In the quasi-static, or infinite, wavelength limit, a time-independent analysis can be used to analyze complex ϵ* While scattering from the brine inclusions must be incorporated into ϵ* over much of the microwave region, it is useful to consider a so-called quasi-static regime, where volume scattering from individual inclusions is relatively small, and the behavior is well approximated with a quasi-static analysis.
Due to the wide variety of possible microstructures and the high dielectric contrast of the components of brine and ice, it is in general quite difficult to accurately predict ϵ* for sea ice, although many "mixing formulas" for ϵ* have been proposed and compared with experimental data (Reference Hoekstra and CapillinoHoekstra and Capillino, 1971; Reference Vant, Ramseier and MakiosVant and others, 1978; Reference Golden and AckleyGolden and Ackley, 1981; Reference Stogryn and DesargantStogryn, 1985; Reference Arcone, Gow and McGrewArcone and others, 1986; Reference Sihvola and KongSihvola and Kong, 1988), where typically the sea ice is assumed to consist of a host of pure ice containing ellipsoidal brine and air inclusions. While mixing formulas are certainly useful, their applicability to the full range of microstructures presented by sea ice is limited, and the assumptions under which they are derived are not always satisfied, such as when the brine inclusions percolate. Consequently, we have developed (Reference GoldenGolden, 1995a, Reference Golden, Papanicolaou and Chandra1997c; Reference Sawicz and GoldenSawicz and Golden, 1995) a comprehensive series of rigorous bounds on ϵ* for sea ice, valid in the quasi-static regime, which we briefly describe. The sea ice is assumed to be a two-component composite material of brine with complex permittivity eh which depends on frequency and temperature (Reference Stogryn and DesargantStogryn and Desargant, 1985), and ice of permittivity ϵ2 which depends weakly on frequency and temperature (Reference Mätzler and WegmullerMätzler and Wegmüller, 1987) (which we slightly adjust via the Maxwell-Garnett formula to account for the presence of air (Reference Golden, Papanicolaou and ChandraGolden, 1997c; Reference Cherkaeva and GoldenCherkaeva and Golden, 1998)). Our approach is based on a general, analytic continuation method for obtaining bounds on the effective properties of composites (Reference BergmanBergman, 1980; Reference MiltonMilton, 1980; Reference Golden and PapanicolaouGolden and Papanicolaou, 1983), where ϵ* is treated as an analytic function of h = ∊1/∊2, and its properties are exploited to obtain the bounds, which apply to any two-component medium, such as snow or slush, which are also of interest for sea-ice remote sensing. (A full treatment of composites with three or more components is more involved mathematically, requiring analysis of Isomorphic functions of several complex variables (Reference Golden and PapanicolaouGolden and Papanicolaou, 1985; Reference GoldenGolden, 1986; Reference MiltonMilton, 1987; Reference Milton and GoldenMilton and Golden, 1990).)
The key step in the method is to obtain the Stieltjes integral representation (Reference BergmanBergman, 1978; Reference Golden and PapanicolaouGolden and Papanicolaou, 1983)
where μ is a positive (spectral) measure on [0,1] containing all the information about the geometry of the composite, which is separated from the parameter information contained in s = 1/(1 - h). Statistical information about the geometry is input through the moments μn of μ, which are related to the correlation functions of the brine phase. For example, μ0 = pi, the volume fraction of brine. Bounds on ∊*, or f(s), are obtained by fixing s in Equation (5), varying over admissible measures μ (or admissible geometries), such as those that satisfy only μ0 = p1, and finding the corresponding range of values of f(s) in the complex plane. If just pl is known, we obtain a region r× in the complex ∊*-plane, in which the complex permittivity of sea ice of that brine volume must lie, regardless of geometry. If the sea-ice microstructure is further assumed to be isotropic within the horizontal plane, we obtain a smaller region r2. If we further assume that the sea ice is a matrix-particle composite, where the brine phase is contained in separated inclusions, there is a spectral gap, i.e. the support of μ in Equation (5) lies in an interval [sm, sm], 0 < sm < sM < 1, as observed in fundamental work by Reference BrunoBruno (1991). The further the separation of the inclusions, the smaller the support interval [sm,sm], or the larger the spectral gap, and the tighter the bounds. We obtain regions and which are significant improvements over r, and r2 (Reference Sawicz and GoldenSawicz and Golden, 1995; Reference Golden, Papanicolaou and ChandraGolden, 1997c). To compare the matrix-particle bounds with data in Reference Arcone, Gow and McGrewArcone and others (1986), we assume that within the horizontal plane, the brine is contained in separated, circular discs, which allows us to utilize the explicit calculations in Reference BrunoBruno (1991) of sm and sm. In particular, we consider discs of brine of radius rb which hold random positions in a host of ice, in such a way that each disc of brine is surrounded by a "corona" of ice, with outer radius r. Then the minimal separation of brine inclusions is 2(ri - rb). Such a medium is called a g-material, where q = rb/ri, 0 < q < 1. For such a geometry, Reference BrunoBruno (1991) has calculated and Smaller q values indicate well-separated brine (and presumably cold temperatures), and q = 1 corresponds to no restriction on the separation, with sm = 0, sm = 1, so that and reduce to r× and r2. Examination of photomicrographs of the brine microstructure in the sea-ice samples of Reference Arcone, Gow and McGrewArcone and others (1986) indicates that even when the ice is quite cold, the brine inclusions are quite close, and it is very difficult to estimate appropriate values of q. Instead, for a given dataset at a particular temperature, we choose a value of q which best captures the data, and it is always quite close to 1. Computationally we find that because of the high contrast in the components, the bounds and are extremely sensitive to small changes in q for q near 1. By carefully comparing our bounds to data over a wide range of temperatures, we have found that as the temperature increases, i.e. as the percolation threshold tc is approached and the brine inclusions grow closer, the data sweep across from one side of the region r2 to the other (while the regions becomes larger as the brine volume increases), and q increases as well. Once the temperature is above Tc, the data require that q = 1, and the matrix-particle assumption is no longer valid. This fascinating behavior is illustrated in Figure 5, which compares data from samples 84−3 and 84−4 (s = 3.8 ppt) in Reference Arcone, Gow and McGrewArcone and others (1986) with the bounds as the temperature is varied over a wide range. We have also applied our matrix-particle bounds, developed for sea ice, to analyze the electromagnetic properties of some insulator/conductor composites arising in smart materials technology (Reference Golden, Varadan and ChandraGolden, 1997b).
Finally, we mention our work (Reference Cherkaeva and GoldenCherkaeva and Golden, 1998; Reference GoldenGolden and others, 1998b) in developing a rigorous theory of inverse homogenization, based on inversion of the bounds R1 and r2, which has produced an accurate algorithm for reconstructing the brine volume of sea ice from measurements of the effective complex permittivity. Furthermore, through more sophisticated mathematical techniques, with C. Orum and E. Cherkaeva, we have been able to invert the matrix-particle bounds and as well to obtain inverse bounds on the separation parameter q from measurements of ∊*.
4. Measurements of Percolation on First-Year Sea Ice
During the recent Mertz Glacier Polynya Experiment (16 July−7 September 1999) aboard RSV aurora australis, we conducted measurements of percolation processes on first-year sea ice in the vicinity of 66° S, 144° E with V. I. Lytle, A. P. Worby, R. Massom, I. Allison, A. Rada, M. Paget and A. Roberts. As mentioned above, flooding of a snow layer on the surface of sea ice through upward brine percolation, and subsequent freezing of the slush, is an important mechanism for ice production in some regions of the Antarctic. This process is also essential for supplying nutrients to algal communities growing in the ice. The theory outlined in section 2 gives a reasonable prediction of the critical brine-volume fraction, but more development of the model is needed to understand how macroscopic brine channels or tubes form once the threshold is exceeded, and what determines their separation and properties. Moreover, to assess the level of ice production or nutrient replenishment through percolation processes, it is useful to be able to estimate the vertical fluid permeability of the sea ice, where the bulk of the transport is presumably carried by these larger channels. During a particularly warm period around 12−15 August, where air temperatures reached about 0°C, and the ice surface temperatures were in the −4° to −5°C range, we cleared away the snow and observed extensive arrays of brine tubes at the sea-ice surface, which presumably extended to the bottom. We constructed three "percolation pits", or square meter areas with the snow cleared off, during two of the ice stations. We estimated the number of well-developed brine tubes, measured their diameters, measured temperatures and took photos and video of these structures. The estimates for the number of tubes with about 1cm diameters were 60−65, 90−100 and 100−120. Interestingly, in the second pit, over about a 15 min period after the snow was cleared away we observed that about 2 cm of brine had flooded the surface of the ice in one corner of the pit. It appears that significant flooding is often associated with "blisters" or "pock-marked" regions of the snow surface (perhaps caused by new or blowing snow accumulating on a very wet surface), and aerial photographs were later taken from a helicopter in order to estimate the density of such regions, which were numerous. While we believe that surface flooding and subsequent freezing is only a minor component of ice production in this polynya, our observations show that it is present, and gave us a more quantitative picture of this process than we had previously.
As a further investigation of brine-channel structure and the percolation process, we extracted with a chain-saw three blocks of sea ice of horizontal dimensions about 25 cm × 75 cm and thicknesses of 37−66 cm. The ice surface temperatures at these stations were about −9.4° and −7.3°C. The slabs were turned upside down to expose large brine channels, and bright red, salty beet juice was poured onto the ice. The percolation of the beet juice through the sample was videotaped and photographed. While juice that propagated through the large brine channels made its way far into the samples, much of the liquid stopped after traveling only 10 cm or so, depending on the sample. This was found later through core analysis to correspond to a structural transition between warm columnar ice where percolation was observed, and colder, granular ice with percolation occurring only in large brine channels. "Thin" sections were chain-sawed off one block to better observe the percolation front. These experiments provided a demonstration of how brine moves through sea ice, as well as the difference in the percolation thresholds for columnar and granular ice.
Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank S. F. Ackley and V. I. Lytle for providing much of the data appearing in this paper, as well as for their ideas and close collaboration over the years as this work has developed. The author would also like to thank the crew and participants of the Mertz Glacier Polynya Experiment for their role in obtaining the results in section 4.