Mueller Sebastian B, Kueppers Ulrich, Huber Matthew S, Hess Kai-Uwe, Poesges Gisela, Ruthensteiner Bernhard, Dingwell Donald B
1Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München LMU, Munich, Germany.
2University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
Bull Volcanol. 2018;80(4):32. doi: 10.1007/s00445-018-1207-3. Epub 2018 Mar 2.
Aggregation is a common process occurring in many diverse particulate gas mixtures (e.g. those derived from explosive volcanic eruptions, meteorite impact events, and fluid bed processing). It results from the collision and sticking of particles suspended in turbulent gas/air. To date, there is no generalized model of the underlying physical processes. Here, we investigate aggregates from 18 natural deposits (16 volcanic deposits and two meteorite impact deposits) as well as aggregates produced experimentally via fluidized bed techniques. All aggregates were analyzed for their size, internal structuring, and constituent particle size distribution. Commonalities and differences between the aggregate types are then used to infer salient features of the aggregation process. Average core to rim ratios of internally structured aggregates (accretionary lapilli) is found to be similar for artificial and volcanic aggregates but up to an order of magnitude different than impact-related aggregates. Rim structures of artificial and volcanic aggregates appear to be physically similar (single, sub-spherical, regularly-shaped rims) whereas impact-related aggregates more often show multiple or irregularly shaped rims. The particle size distributions (PSDs) of all three aggregate types are similar (< 200 μm). This proves that in all three environments, aggregation occurs under broadly similar conditions despite the significant differences in source conditions (particle volume fraction, particle size distribution, particle composition, temperature), residence times, plume conditions (e.g., humidity and temperature), and dynamics of fallout and deposition. Impact-generated and volcanic aggregates share many similarities, and in some cases may be indistinguishable without their stratigraphic context.
团聚是许多不同颗粒气体混合物中常见的过程(例如那些源自火山爆发、陨石撞击事件和流化床处理的混合物)。它是由悬浮在湍流气体/空气中的颗粒碰撞和黏附导致的。迄今为止,尚未有关于潜在物理过程的通用模型。在此,我们研究了来自18个自然沉积物(16个火山沉积物和2个陨石撞击沉积物)的团聚物以及通过流化床技术实验产生的团聚物。对所有团聚物的大小、内部结构和组成颗粒大小分布进行了分析。然后利用团聚物类型之间的共性和差异来推断团聚过程的显著特征。发现内部有结构的团聚物(增生火山弹)的平均核边比对于人工和火山团聚物来说是相似的,但与撞击相关的团聚物相比相差一个数量级。人工和火山团聚物的边缘结构在物理上似乎相似(单一、亚球形、规则形状的边缘),而与撞击相关的团聚物更常显示出多个或不规则形状的边缘。所有三种团聚物类型的颗粒大小分布(PSD)相似(<200μm)。这证明在所有三种环境中,尽管源条件(颗粒体积分数、颗粒大小分布、颗粒成分、温度)、停留时间、羽流条件(例如湿度和温度)以及沉降和沉积动力学存在显著差异,但团聚在大致相似的条件下发生。撞击产生的团聚物和火山团聚物有许多相似之处,在某些情况下,如果没有地层背景,可能无法区分。