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[SCG51-08] Phase separation of hydrous Vesuvius melt: vesicle nucleation or spinodal decomposition?
★Invited Papers
Keywords:magma degassing, magma ascent rate, vesicle number density, spinodal decomposition, phase separation
Experiments were conducted in an internally heated pressure vessel equipped with a high-pressure valve that facilitates continuous decompression. 5.3 wt% H2O were dissolved in the melts at 200 MPa and 1523 K for 96 h. Subsequently, the slightly H2O undersaturated melts were isothermally decompressed at 1323 or 1373 K with rates of 0.024-1.7 MPa·s-1. At final pressures (Pfinal) between 110 and 70 MPa, the samples were isobarically quenched with ~150 K·s-1 to room temperature. The VND of the vitreous samples were determined with optical microscopy and quantitative backscattered electron image analysis combined with computational 2D to 3D transformation.
Homogeneously dispersed vesicles are observed in the samples decompressed to a Pfinal ≦100 MPa which corresponds to a ΔP of ~95 MPa that is necessary to induce homogeneous phase separation. High logVND’s of ~5.2 (in mm-3), corresponding to average vesicle distances of 10 µm, are observed irrespective of decompression rate within the investigated range. A nucleation theory based decompression rate meter (Toramaru, 2006), which is commonly used to estimate magma ascent velocity from VND of volcanic ejecta, fails to explain the experimentally observed decompression rate independent VND. Alternatively, decompression induced H2O-silicate melt phase separation may be described by the theory of spinodal decomposition (Cahn, 1965) at the limit of thermodynamic stability. Critical behavior of hydrous silicate melt has already been evidenced experimentally by e.g. Shen and Keppler (1997) and is attributed to spinodal decomposition.
Irrespective of the phase separation mechanism, a decompression rate independent VND has profound consequences for the degassing dynamics of natural polyphase hydrous magma, that contain crystals and pre-existing fluid vesicles. During ascent, H2O supersaturation is decreased in melt shells surrounding pre-existing vesicles by H2O diffusion. Homogeneous phase separation occurs in interstitial melt volumes in which sufficient supersaturation is still preserved. If the decompression rate is fast enough to maintain such supersaturated volumes, the formation of vesicles with high logVND of 5.2 inevitably causes efficient melt degassing within seconds due to short H2O diffusion distances on a 10 µm scale from the melt into fluid vesicles. This causes rapid density decrease accompanied by sudden increase of magma buoyancy required for explosive volcanism.
Cahn, J.W., 1965. J. Chem. Phys. 42, 93–99.
Shen, A.H., Keppler, H., 1997. Nature 385, 710–712.
Toramaru, A., 2006. J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res. 154, 303–316.