Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4679963 Earth and Planetary Science Letters 2008 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

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.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
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