Given $$a_{n+1}=a_n+\frac{n}{a_1+\dots+a_n},\qquad a_1>0$$ The answer is $$\lim_{n\to\infty} a_n\sim\sqrt{3}\cdot\sqrt{n}-\frac{\sqrt{3}}{4}\cdot\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}$$
It is easy to show this sequence is increasing, and is divergent, because if assume the opposite $A=\lim_{n\to\infty} a_n$, we will get $A=A+\frac{1}A$, which gives contradictions. We also have
$$a_{n+1}\ge a_n +\frac{1}{a_n}\ge2$$
From here I can show:
$$a_1+\frac{n}{a_n}\le a_{n+1}\le a_1+\frac{n}{a_1}$$
Update.(1)
This equation can be also written as:
$$\begin{align} a_n&=\sum_{k=1}^n a_k-\sum_{k=1}^{n-1} a_k\\ \\ a_n&=\frac{n}{a_{n+1}-a_n}-\frac{n-1}{a_{n}-a_{n-1}}\\ \\ a_n(a_{n+1}-a_n)(a_{n}-a_{n-1})&=n(a_{n}-a_{n-1})-(n-1)(a_{n+1}-a_n)\tag{1} \end{align}$$
If assume $a_n=c\cdot n^p$
$$a_{n+1}-a_n\sim cp\cdot n^{p-1},~~~a_{n}-a_{n-1}\sim cp\cdot n^{p-1}$$
Plug into $(1)$ and only keep the leading order:
$$c^2p\cdot n^{2p-1}=1$$
So we get $p=\frac{1}2$ and $c=\sqrt{2}$
Why the leading order coefficient is $\sqrt{2}$, not $\sqrt{3}$?
The bottom line is, if I take the answer as template, let $$a_n=c\sqrt{n}+t\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}+o(\frac{1}{\sqrt{n}})$$
Pretend we don't know coefficients $c$ and $t$. Now we want to compute $c$ and $t$. To the leading order approximation, We have $$a_{n+1}-a_n= c\cdot \frac{1}{2\sqrt{n}}+O(\frac{1}{n^{3/2}})$$
Next, plug into Eq.$(1)$ and we can solve for $c=\sqrt{2}$. Why does this give a contradiction?
Update.(2)
Thank you to @Sangchul Lee , @Somos and @Youem
I put the computation part in the answer box below, and it works for asymptotic approximation at arbitrary order.