Event 

Title:
Computational fluid dynamics investigation of gas transport
When:
19.12.2016
Where:
USI Lugano Campus - Lugano
Category:
ICS Events

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Description

The Faculty of Informatics is pleased to announce a seminar given by Dr. Andrea Parmigiani  

 

A computational fluid dynamics investigation of gas transport in crystal rich magma reservoir  

Speaker: Dr. Andrea Parmigiani  

Department of Earth Sciences of ETHZ

Date: Monday, December 19, 2016

Place: USI Lugano Campus, room SI-004, Informatics building (Via G. Buffi 13)

Time: 11:30    

 

Abstract: Volcanic eruptions transfer large amounts of gases to the atmosphere. In particular, the sulfur released during large silicic explosive eruptions can induce global cooling. A fundamental goal in volcanology is to assess  the potential for eruption of large volumes of  magma stored at shallow depth in the crust and to constrain the amount of volatiles that can be released during these eruptions.

This becomes particularly challenging in water-rich and shallow silicic magma reservoirs that likely store extensive amount of exsolved volatiles. These exsolved volatiles (mainly H2O), due to their buoyancy, may potentially escape the reservoir (outgas). However, as (1) magma bodies are known to spend most of their supra-solidus life at high crystallinity and (2) vapor being mostly non-wetting in crystal-bearing silicic magmas (i.e. vapor tends to form bubbles with melt films coating crystals), the tendency of bubbles to migrate upwards will be una voidably hindered by resistive capillary stresses.

Here we use lattice Boltzmann numerical calculations at the scale of crystals and bubbles  to explore the conditions under which gas migration at high crystallinity can become efficient. We investigate the onset of bubbles mobility and efficient vapor transport at the pore-scale over a range of (1) crystallinity, (2) vapor volume fraction and (3) crystal size.

We then insert these results as a parameterization into a large scale thermo-mechanical magma reservoir box-model, and track the outgassing history during long-term cooling of magma bodies as they are stored in the upper crust. Our pore-scale results suggest that outgassing can be efficient over crystallinities that range from about 40 to 60% (i.e. for typical crystal sizes of 1 to 5 mm) because (1) of the balance between buoyancy and capillary stresses and (2) the positive effect of crystal confinement on vapor connectivity.

However, thermo-mechanical feedbacks due to volume changes within the reservoir during outgassing and the visco-elastic response of the wall-rock have the potential to slow down outgassing even when outgassing is not transport limited (above the dynamic percolation threshold for gas migration).    

 

Biography: Andrea Parmigiani is  a research scientist at the Department of Earth Sciences of ETHZ (SNF Ambizione fellowship). He received his Ph.D. (2011) from the University of Geneva, Switzerland (Computer Science and Earth Sciences departments). He shares is research activity between Computational Fluid Dynamics, where he is mainly interested in the modeling of pore-scale fluid flow in porous media with the lattice Boltzmann technique, and Physical Volcanology, where he is mostly active in  studying the fluid mechanics that control the transport of magmatic volatiles through shallow crustal magma bodies.    

Host: Prof. Olaf Schenk

Venue

Venue:
USI Lugano Campus
Street:
Via G. Buffi 13
ZIP:
6900
City:
Lugano

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