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Büttner et al. 2002
Büttner, R., Dellino, P., La Volpe, L., Lorenz, V. and Zimanowski, B. (2002). Thermohydraulic explosions in phreatomagmatic eruptions as evidenced by the comparison between pyroclasts and products from Molten Fuel Coolant Interaction experiments. Journal of Geophysical Research 107: doi: 10.1029/2001JB000511. issn: 0148-0227.

Thermohydraulic explosions were produced by Molten Fuel Coolant Interaction (MFCI) experiments using remelted shoshonitic rocks from Vulcano (Italy). The fragmentation history and energy release were recorded. The resulting products were recovered and analyzed with the scanning electron microscope. Fine particles from experiments show shape and surface features that result from melt fragmentation in brittle mode. These clasts relate to the thermohydraulic phase of the MFCI, where most of the mechanical energy is released; they are here called active particles. The total surface area of such particles is proportional to the energy of the respective explosions. Other particles from experiments show shape and surface features that result from melt fragmentation in a ductile regime. These fragments, called passive particles, form after the thermohydraulic phase, during the expansion phase of the MFCI. In order to verify thermohydraulic explosions in volcanic eruptions, we compared experimental products with samples from phreatomagmatic base-surge deposits of Vulcano. Ash particles from the experiments show features similar to those from the deposits, suggesting that the experiments reproduced the same fragmentation dynamics. To achieve discrimination between active and passive particles, we calculated shape parameters from image analysis. The mass of active particles in base-surge deposits was calculated. As the material properties for the natural samples are identical to the experimental ones, the energy measurements and calculations of the experiments can be applied. For a single phreatomagmatic eruption at Vulcano, a maximum mechanical energy release of 2.75 ¿ 1013 J was calculated, representing a TNT analogue of 6.5 kt.

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Abstract

Keywords
Volcanology, Eruption mechanisms, Volcanology, Ash deposits, Volcanology, Instruments and techniques, Volcanology, Physics and chemistry of magma bodies, Volcanology, General or miscellaneous
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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