Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4679963 | Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2008 | 13 Pages |
The rheological behaviour of synthetic crystal-bearing magmas containing up to 76 vol.% of crystals (0 ≤ ϕS ≤ 0.76) has been investigated experimentally at a confining pressure of 300 MPa and temperatures between 475 and 1000 °C at shear rates between 10− 4 and 2 × 10− 3s− 1. Starting hydrated crystal-bearing glasses were synthesized from a dry haplogranitic glass (Qz36Ab39Or29) and 2.5 wt.% water mixed with 0 (pure hydrous melt), 16, 34, 54, 65 or 76 vol.% of Al2O3 sieved (45 < Ø < 90 µm) crystals. Shear viscosity measurements were performed in torsion (simple shear) in a Paterson gas-medium apparatus.For pure hydrated melt and for 16 vol.% of crystals, the rheology is found to be Newtonian. At higher crystal contents, the magmas exhibit shear thinning behaviour (pseudoplastic). The Einstein–Roscoe equation adequately estimates viscosities of the crystal-bearing magmas at low crystal contents (ϕS ≤ ~ 0.25), but progressively deviates from the measured viscosities with increasing crystal content as the rheological behaviour becomes non-Newtonian. On the basis of a power–law formulation, we propose the following expression to calculate the viscosity as a function of temperature, crystal content and applied stress (or shear rate):γ.=A0(1−Φ/Φm)Kτ(1+K1ΦK2)exp(−QRT),where γ. is shear rate (s− 1), τ is shear stress (MPa), Φ is the crystal volume fraction, T is temperature (K), Φm is the relative maximum packing density, R is the gas constant, Q = 231 kJ mol− 1 is the activation energy of the viscous flow and A0, K, K1 and K2 are empirical parameters.