Model experiment on magma fragmentation in explosive volcanic eruption
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
A new experimental facility has been developed to investigate the fragmentation of vesicular magma undergoing rapid decompression. The facility based on a vertical shock tube was designed and constructed to produce starch syrup foams of high void fraction but low permeability, high liquid viscosity, and at high pressure as alternative to foamy magma exposed to expansion waves. The highly viscous material (starch syrup) of dynamic shear viscosities ranging from 5 to 1012 Pa s were intermixed with nitrogen gas bubbles under 1.6 to 2.6 MPa and were subsequently loaded into an acrylic test section. The foamy starch syrup was pressurized up to 2.6 MPa and then rapidly decompressed to 0.1 MPa, which caused its fragmentation and simultaneous ejection of the fragmentation products into a large-volume chamber. In ejecting high-pressure foam into a low-pressure chamber, the foams fragmentation process was characterized with the help of pressure measurements and high-speed video recording. Prior to decompression experiments, we examined the viscoelastic properties of the foam specimens by using a rheometer. The rapid decompression generated wide varieties of fragment shapes similar to those observable in volcanic explosions, such as elongated to blocky pumice and flat, pointed shards with smooth or conchoidal fracture. The results prove that a shock dynamic approach is effective to model magma fragmentations.
- 日本鉱物科学会の論文
- 2008-06-01
著者
-
Takayama Kazuyoshi
Biomedical Engineering Research Organization Tohoku University
-
YAMAMOTO Hiroaki
Center for Interdisciplinary Research, Tohoku University
-
Ishikawa Ken'ichi
Center For The Advancement Of Higher Education Tohoku University
-
Yamamoto Hiroaki
Center For Interdisciplinary Research Tohoku University
-
Takayama Kazuyoshi
Biomedical Engineering Research Organization (TUBERO), Tohoku University, Sendai 980-0872, Japan
関連論文
- Shock wave induced cytoskeletal and morphological deformations in a human renal carcinoma cell line
- Model experiment on magma fragmentation in explosive volcanic eruption
- Shock Wave Based Biolistic Device for DNA and Drug Delivery