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Sintering of vesiculating pyroclasts

Weaver, J.; Lamur, A.; Lea, T.D.; Wadsworth, F.B.; Kendrick, J.E.; Schauroth, J.; Lavallée, Y.

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Authors

J. Weaver

A. Lamur

T.D. Lea

J.E. Kendrick

J. Schauroth

Y. Lavallée



Abstract

Hot volcanic pyroclasts can sinter, vesiculate, and outgas in concert – a combination of processes which remains poorly constrained. And yet this combination of processes can occur coincidently during deposition from pyroclastic density currents, in conduit-filling pyroclastic debris, and in tuffisites. In many of these settings, it is the sintering-driven evolution of permeability that is key to gas transport through the evolving deposit. Here, we experimentally and theoretically investigate the evolution of the permeable networks during sintering of hot fragmental volcanic systems, which are hydrous and oversaturated at the experimental conditions. Firstly, we find that vesiculation results in shutting of the inter-granular porous network as bubble growth drives expansion of the particles into one another, destroying interconnected pores. Secondly, we observe that degassing by diffusion out of the particle edge results in contraction of the vesicular particles, re-opening pore spaces between them. Therefore, we find that vesiculation, and diffusive outgassing compete to determine both the intra-fragment vesicularity and the permeability during sintering. The development of intra-fragment vesicularity directly impacts the inter-fragment pore space and its connectivity, which decreases during vesiculation and subsequently increases during diffusive outgassing, prompting complex, non-linear permeability evolution.

The relative dominance of these processes is fragment size dependent; proportionally, fine fragments lose gas at a higher rate than coarser fragments during diffusive outgassing due to larger surface area to volume ratios. As the systems progress, larger fragments retain a higher proportion of gas and so attain greater vesicularities than finer ones – and therefore, the coarse fragmental pyroclasts experience a greater, yet transient, reduction in connected porosity and permeability. We suggest that where vesiculation is sufficient, it can lead to the complete loss of connected porosity and the sealing of permeable pathways much earlier than in a sintering-only system. Our results suggest that classical sintering models must be modified to account for these vesiculation and diffusive degassing processes, and that only a combined vesiculation, sintering, and diffusive outgassing model can resolve the evolution of permeability in hot clastic volcanic systems.

Citation

Weaver, J., Lamur, A., Lea, T., Wadsworth, F., Kendrick, J., Schauroth, J., & Lavallée, Y. (2023). Sintering of vesiculating pyroclasts. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 623, Article 118410. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2023.118410

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 15, 2023
Online Publication Date Oct 20, 2023
Publication Date 2023-12
Deposit Date Jan 16, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 16, 2024
Journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Print ISSN 0012-821X
Electronic ISSN 1385-013X
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 623
Article Number 118410
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2023.118410
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2147926

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