Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts

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Authors

  • Hejiu Hui
  • Youxue Zhang
  • Zhengjiu Xu
  • Piero Del Gaudio
  • Harald Behrens

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • University of Michigan
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3680-3693
Number of pages14
JournalGeochimica et cosmochimica acta
Volume73
Issue number12
Early online date8 Apr 2009
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jun 2009

Abstract

Viscosity of silicate melts is a critical property for understanding volcanic and igneous processes in the Earth. We investigate the pressure effect on the viscosity of rhyolitic melts using two methods: indirect viscosity inference from hydrous species reaction in melts using a piston cylinder at pressures up to 2.8 GPa and direct viscosity measurement by parallel-plate creep viscometer in an internally-heated pressure vessel at pressures up to 0.4 GPa. Comparison of viscosities of a rhyolitic melt with 0.8 wt% water at 0.4 GPa shows that both methods give consistent results. In the indirect method, viscosities of hydrous rhyolitic melts were inferred based on the kinetics of hydrous species reaction in the melt upon cooling (i.e., the equivalence of rheologically defined glass transition temperature and chemically defined apparent equilibrium temperature). The cooling experiments were carried out in a piston-cylinder apparatus using hydrous rhyolitic samples with 0.8-4 wt% water. Cooling rates of the kinetic experiments varied from 0.1 K/s to 100 K/s; hence the range of viscosity inferred from this method covers 3 orders of magnitude. The data from this method show that viscosity increases with increasing pressure from 1 GPa to 3 GPa for hydrous rhyolitic melts with water content ≥0.8 wt% in the high viscosity range. We also measured viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water using the parallel-plate viscometer at pressures 0.2 and 0.4 GPa in an internally-heated pressure vessel. The data show that viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water decreases with increasing pressure. Combining our new data with literature data, we develop a viscosity model of rhyolitic melts as a function of temperature, pressure and water content.

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Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts. / Hui, Hejiu; Zhang, Youxue; Xu, Zhengjiu et al.
In: Geochimica et cosmochimica acta, Vol. 73, No. 12, 15.06.2009, p. 3680-3693.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Hui, H, Zhang, Y, Xu, Z, Del Gaudio, P & Behrens, H 2009, 'Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts', Geochimica et cosmochimica acta, vol. 73, no. 12, pp. 3680-3693. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2009.03.035
Hui, H., Zhang, Y., Xu, Z., Del Gaudio, P., & Behrens, H. (2009). Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts. Geochimica et cosmochimica acta, 73(12), 3680-3693. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2009.03.035
Hui H, Zhang Y, Xu Z, Del Gaudio P, Behrens H. Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts. Geochimica et cosmochimica acta. 2009 Jun 15;73(12):3680-3693. Epub 2009 Apr 8. doi: 10.1016/j.gca.2009.03.035
Hui, Hejiu ; Zhang, Youxue ; Xu, Zhengjiu et al. / Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts. In: Geochimica et cosmochimica acta. 2009 ; Vol. 73, No. 12. pp. 3680-3693.
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title = "Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts",
abstract = "Viscosity of silicate melts is a critical property for understanding volcanic and igneous processes in the Earth. We investigate the pressure effect on the viscosity of rhyolitic melts using two methods: indirect viscosity inference from hydrous species reaction in melts using a piston cylinder at pressures up to 2.8 GPa and direct viscosity measurement by parallel-plate creep viscometer in an internally-heated pressure vessel at pressures up to 0.4 GPa. Comparison of viscosities of a rhyolitic melt with 0.8 wt% water at 0.4 GPa shows that both methods give consistent results. In the indirect method, viscosities of hydrous rhyolitic melts were inferred based on the kinetics of hydrous species reaction in the melt upon cooling (i.e., the equivalence of rheologically defined glass transition temperature and chemically defined apparent equilibrium temperature). The cooling experiments were carried out in a piston-cylinder apparatus using hydrous rhyolitic samples with 0.8-4 wt% water. Cooling rates of the kinetic experiments varied from 0.1 K/s to 100 K/s; hence the range of viscosity inferred from this method covers 3 orders of magnitude. The data from this method show that viscosity increases with increasing pressure from 1 GPa to 3 GPa for hydrous rhyolitic melts with water content ≥0.8 wt% in the high viscosity range. We also measured viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water using the parallel-plate viscometer at pressures 0.2 and 0.4 GPa in an internally-heated pressure vessel. The data show that viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water decreases with increasing pressure. Combining our new data with literature data, we develop a viscosity model of rhyolitic melts as a function of temperature, pressure and water content.",
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TY - JOUR

T1 - Pressure dependence of viscosity of rhyolitic melts

AU - Hui, Hejiu

AU - Zhang, Youxue

AU - Xu, Zhengjiu

AU - Del Gaudio, Piero

AU - Behrens, Harald

N1 - Funding Information: We thank M. Toplis for editorial handling as well as insightful comments, and C.E. Lesher, A. Priven and an anonymous reviewer for insightful reviews. This research is supported by NSF Grants EAR-0537598 and EAR-0711050.

PY - 2009/6/15

Y1 - 2009/6/15

N2 - Viscosity of silicate melts is a critical property for understanding volcanic and igneous processes in the Earth. We investigate the pressure effect on the viscosity of rhyolitic melts using two methods: indirect viscosity inference from hydrous species reaction in melts using a piston cylinder at pressures up to 2.8 GPa and direct viscosity measurement by parallel-plate creep viscometer in an internally-heated pressure vessel at pressures up to 0.4 GPa. Comparison of viscosities of a rhyolitic melt with 0.8 wt% water at 0.4 GPa shows that both methods give consistent results. In the indirect method, viscosities of hydrous rhyolitic melts were inferred based on the kinetics of hydrous species reaction in the melt upon cooling (i.e., the equivalence of rheologically defined glass transition temperature and chemically defined apparent equilibrium temperature). The cooling experiments were carried out in a piston-cylinder apparatus using hydrous rhyolitic samples with 0.8-4 wt% water. Cooling rates of the kinetic experiments varied from 0.1 K/s to 100 K/s; hence the range of viscosity inferred from this method covers 3 orders of magnitude. The data from this method show that viscosity increases with increasing pressure from 1 GPa to 3 GPa for hydrous rhyolitic melts with water content ≥0.8 wt% in the high viscosity range. We also measured viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water using the parallel-plate viscometer at pressures 0.2 and 0.4 GPa in an internally-heated pressure vessel. The data show that viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water decreases with increasing pressure. Combining our new data with literature data, we develop a viscosity model of rhyolitic melts as a function of temperature, pressure and water content.

AB - Viscosity of silicate melts is a critical property for understanding volcanic and igneous processes in the Earth. We investigate the pressure effect on the viscosity of rhyolitic melts using two methods: indirect viscosity inference from hydrous species reaction in melts using a piston cylinder at pressures up to 2.8 GPa and direct viscosity measurement by parallel-plate creep viscometer in an internally-heated pressure vessel at pressures up to 0.4 GPa. Comparison of viscosities of a rhyolitic melt with 0.8 wt% water at 0.4 GPa shows that both methods give consistent results. In the indirect method, viscosities of hydrous rhyolitic melts were inferred based on the kinetics of hydrous species reaction in the melt upon cooling (i.e., the equivalence of rheologically defined glass transition temperature and chemically defined apparent equilibrium temperature). The cooling experiments were carried out in a piston-cylinder apparatus using hydrous rhyolitic samples with 0.8-4 wt% water. Cooling rates of the kinetic experiments varied from 0.1 K/s to 100 K/s; hence the range of viscosity inferred from this method covers 3 orders of magnitude. The data from this method show that viscosity increases with increasing pressure from 1 GPa to 3 GPa for hydrous rhyolitic melts with water content ≥0.8 wt% in the high viscosity range. We also measured viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water using the parallel-plate viscometer at pressures 0.2 and 0.4 GPa in an internally-heated pressure vessel. The data show that viscosity of rhyolitic melt with 0.13 wt% water decreases with increasing pressure. Combining our new data with literature data, we develop a viscosity model of rhyolitic melts as a function of temperature, pressure and water content.

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DO - 10.1016/j.gca.2009.03.035

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