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Silicate melt properties and volcanic eruptions
Author(s) -
Zhang Youxue,
Xu Zhengjiu,
Zhu Mengfan,
Wang Haoyue
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
reviews of geophysics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 8.087
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1944-9208
pISSN - 8755-1209
DOI - 10.1029/2006rg000216
Subject(s) - silicate , solubility , thermal diffusivity , pyroclastic rock , geology , rhyolite , mineralogy , volcano , volcanic rock , stoichiometry , thermodynamics , geochemistry , chemistry , organic chemistry , physics
Knowledge about the properties of silicate melts is needed by volcanologists and petrologists to evaluate the dynamics of volcanic eruptions and magmatic processes. These properties include the solubility and diffusivity of volatile components in silicate melts, silicate melt viscosity, and the fragmentation condition. Data and models of each property are reviewed and assessed. For rhyolitic melts many properties are sufficiently well known to allow realistic modeling of volcanic and magmatic processes. One interesting example is the role of speciation in the solubility and diffusivity of H 2 O and CO 2 . Even though both H 2 O and CO 2 are present in silicate melts as at least two species, the complexity in the solubility and diffusion behavior of H 2 O and the simplicity of CO 2 are due to differences in the speciation reaction: For the H 2 O component the stoichiometric coefficient is one for one hydrous species (molecular H 2 O) but is two for the other hydrous species (OH) in the species interconversion reaction, whereas for CO 2 the stoichiometric coefficients for all carbon species are one. The investigation of the species reaction not only helps in understanding the solubility and diffusion behavior, but the reaction among the hydrous species also serves as a geospeedometer (cooling rate indicator) for hydrous rhyolitic pyroclasts and glass and provides a method to infer viscosity. For melts other than rhyolite, a preliminary description of their properties is also available, but much more experimental and modeling work is necessary to quantify these properties more accurately.