Title of article :
SolEx: A model for mixed COHSCl-volatile solubilities and exsolved gas compositions in basalt
Author/Authors :
Witham، نويسنده , , Fred and Blundy، نويسنده , , Jonathan E. Kohn، نويسنده , , Simon C. and Lesne، نويسنده , , Priscille and Dixon، نويسنده , , Jacqueline and Churakov، نويسنده , , Sergey V. and Botcharnikov، نويسنده , , Roman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
We present a software application, SolEx, to calculate basaltic melt and coexisting vapour compositions in the system C–O–H–S–Cl. Such a model has great utility in interpreting emitted gas and melt inclusion compositions, especially through the incorporation of sulphur and chlorine, the most commonly measured volcanic gas species. We assume that the behaviour of the fluid phase is controlled by the volumetrically dominant volatile species, H2O and CO2, whereas sulphur and chlorine partition between the melt and fluid phases. Melt–fluid partition coefficients for S and Cl were parameterised from measurements by Lesne et al. (2011a, p. 1737). The model of Churakov and Gottschalk (2003a, p. 2415) was applied to calculate fugacity coefficients and the equilibrium constants for the reaction i melt → i fluid were thereby deduced. SO2 dominates at oxidation states of Δ NNO > 0.5 (Jugo et al., 2010, p. 5926), where this model is applicable.
forward model, total volatile inventories and melt composition are specified by the user. The parameterisation of Dixon (1997, p. 368) is used to predict the partitioning of CO2 and H2O between vapour and melt phases. An iterative procedure is employed to predict the partitioning of S and Cl components between fluid and melt phases. Melt and gas compositions and gas volume fraction are thereby modelled over pressures in the range 5–4000 bar. This approach satisfactorily reproduces independent literature data on S and Cl behaviour in basalt. SolEx is a user-friendly software package available for OS X and Windows, facilitating modelling of closed- and open-system C–O–H–S–Cl degassing in basalts.
Keywords :
water , Carbon dioxide , Chlorine , solubility , Sulphur , basalt
Journal title :
Computers & Geosciences
Journal title :
Computers & Geosciences