This article investigates the molecular mixing caused by
Rayleigh–Taylor (RT) instability of a gravitationally unstable
density interface tilted at a small angle to the horizontal. The mixing
is measured by the increase in background potential energy, and the
mixing efficiency, or fraction of energy irreversibly lost to fluid
motion doing work against gravity, is calculated. Laboratory
experiments are carried out using saline and fresh water, and modeled
with compressible numerical simulations, with a suitable choice of
parameters and initial conditions. The experiments show that the high
cumulative efficiency of mixing in RT instability at a horizontal
interface is only slightly reduced by an interface tilt of up to
10°, despite the strong overturning that occurs. Instantaneous
mixing efficiencies as high as 0.5–0.6 are measured, when RT
instability is active, with lower values of about 0.35 during the
subsequent overturning. The numerical simulations capture the most
unstable scales and the overturning motion well, but generate more
mixing than the experiments, with the instantaneous mixing efficiency
remaining at 0.5 for most of the run. The difference may be due to
restratification at small scales in the high Prandtl number
experiments.