岩浆房
结晶
地质学
岩浆
对流
传热
图层(电子)
热的
矿物学
热力学
材料科学
复合材料
地球化学
火山
物理
作者
Herbert E. Huppert,J. S. Turner
标识
DOI:10.1016/0012-821x(81)90075-3
摘要
It has recently been suggested that periodic influxes of hot but heavy magma into the base of a basaltic magma chamber can remain isolated from the rest of the chamber while the new magma cools and crystallization proceeds. When thermal equilibrium is almost complete, the suspended crystals settle out and the residual, less dense liquid can then mix with the fluid above. In the present paper the basic fluid-dynamical processes underlying this model have been investigated in laboratory experiments using aqueous solutions. The lower layer was hot KNO3 solution, for which saturated solutions become less dense as the temperature decreases. With a cold, deeper layer of less dense NaNO3 or K2CO3 above the lower layer, there was strong convective transfer of heat through a sharp interface separating the layers, at a rate which is predicted here drawing on previous studies carried out with oceanographic applications in mind. Once crystallization began, non-equilibrium effects became important and the observed temperatures differ somewhat from those predicted. In the experiments crystals grew mainly from the bottom rather than while in suspension, but this is not an essential aspect of the model. The important fact is that the density of the residual liquid in the lower layer decreased until it became equal to that of the upper layer, and then the interface broke down so that the two layers mixed thoroughly together, leaving a layer of KNO3 crystals at the base. No crystallization at all occurred when the hot input liquid was forced to mix initially with the cold solution already in the chamber.
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