AI Article Synopsis

  • Volcanic lightning can remelt volcanic ash particles, leading to the formation of glass spheres as molten particles round and cool.
  • The melting and rounding processes depend on the size of the particles and the intensity and duration of the heating, with smaller particles reacting faster.
  • A numerical model helps define key parameters for analyzing heat transfer in volcanic particles, allowing scientists to estimate volcanic lightning conditions based on the size of glass spheres found in ash deposits.

Article Abstract

Volcanic ash particles can be remelted by the high temperatures induced in volcanic lightning discharges. The molten particles can round under surface tension then quench to produce glass spheres. Melting and rounding timescales for volcanic materials are strongly dependent on heating duration and peak temperature and are shorter for small particles than for large particles. Therefore, the size distribution of glass spheres recovered from ash deposits potentially record the short duration, high-temperature conditions of volcanic lightning discharges, which are hard to measure directly. We use a 1-D numerical solution to the heat equation to determine the timescales of heating and cooling of volcanic particles during and after rapid heating and compare these with the capillary timescale for rounding an angular particle. We define dimensionless parameters-capillary, Fourier, Stark, Biot, and Peclet numbers-to characterize the competition between heat transfer within the particle, heat transfer at the particle rim, and capillary motion, for particles of different sizes. We apply this framework to the lightning case and constrain a maximum size for ash particles susceptible to surface tension-driven rounding, as a function of lightning temperature and duration, and ash properties. The size limit agrees well with maximum sizes of glass spheres found in volcanic ash that has been subjected to lightning or experimental discharges, demonstrating that the approach that we develop can be used to obtain a first-order estimate of lightning conditions in volcanic plumes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5518765PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2016JB013864DOI Listing

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