This study presents numerical simulations of ice crystal accretion on aircraft surfaces under mixed-phase icing conditions, where ice crystals coexist with supercooled water droplets. The Finite Element Navier–Stokes Analysis Program (FENSAP-ICE) suite, incorporating the Discrete Roughness Optimization Program in 3D (DROP3D) and Ice Accretion Simulation in 3D (ICE3D) solvers, was applied to the Common Research Model with Natural Laminar Flow (CRM-NLF) to examine the effects of crystal size, aspect ratio, and concentration on ice growth. The results show that the presence of ice crystals produces smoother, more uniform, and substantially thicker ice compared with droplet-only cases, where distinct horns and roughness dominate. At peak growth locations, the predicted ice thickness increases by up to 75% under mixed-phase conditions. Quantitative analyses reveal that increasing crystal diameter from 50 μm to 200 μm raises ice growth by 25%–75%, increasing aspect ratios from 0.05 to 1 increases growth by 20%–75%, and raising concentrations from 0.25 to 2 kg/m3 enhances growth by nearly 450%. These findings demonstrate the critical role of ice crystals in promoting layered ice accumulation, clarify the mechanisms driving mixed-phase icing, and provide theoretical guidance for advancing anti-icing and de-icing technologies in aviation.
Li et al. (Tue,) studied this question.