We present new experimental results on the study of the space and time modulation of compositional fields during chaotic mixing between mafic and felsic silicate melts. The experimental strategy was planned using numerical simulations performed using the experimental geometry. These mixing experiments were performed using a recently developed experimental apparatus, which is capable of mixing high-viscosity sil- icate melts at high temperatures and under precisely controlled conditions of fluid-dynamics and strain. The compositional variability produced by the mixing process was investigated both along linear analytical tran- sects and on high-resolution 2D X-ray maps, covering the mixing patterns. Our results indicate that chaotic flow fields represent very powerful dynamics to blend silicate melts, even under laminar fluid dynamic conditions (Reynolds number ca. 10! 7) and for dissimilar melts with high vis- cosity ratios (on the order of 103). The repetition of stretching and folding processes between the two melts induced a strong increase of contact interfaces thus favoring efficient chemical exchanges. As a result the ini- tial mafic composition is no longer detectable in the mixing system after ca. 2 h (i.e. the duration of the ex- periment). A further important result is the observation of highly non-linear patterns in inter-elemental plots produced by the onset of diffusive fractionation processes. This is contrary to common thinking that magma mixing should always produce linear trends between pairs of chemical elements. A new measure, the “concentration variance”, is proposed to quantify chemical element mobility during the mixing process. This measure is statistically robust and can be quantitatively used to measure chemical ele- ment mobility independently of the geometry in which the compositional variation (i.e. transects, areas, etc.) is embedded or the local strain history of the mingling. Our results highlight concentration variance as a robust probe of the as yet poorly-understood processes in- volved in the common petrological process of magma mixing.

The space and time complexity of chaotic mixing of silicate melts: Implications for igneous petrology

PERUGINI, Diego;
2012

Abstract

We present new experimental results on the study of the space and time modulation of compositional fields during chaotic mixing between mafic and felsic silicate melts. The experimental strategy was planned using numerical simulations performed using the experimental geometry. These mixing experiments were performed using a recently developed experimental apparatus, which is capable of mixing high-viscosity sil- icate melts at high temperatures and under precisely controlled conditions of fluid-dynamics and strain. The compositional variability produced by the mixing process was investigated both along linear analytical tran- sects and on high-resolution 2D X-ray maps, covering the mixing patterns. Our results indicate that chaotic flow fields represent very powerful dynamics to blend silicate melts, even under laminar fluid dynamic conditions (Reynolds number ca. 10! 7) and for dissimilar melts with high vis- cosity ratios (on the order of 103). The repetition of stretching and folding processes between the two melts induced a strong increase of contact interfaces thus favoring efficient chemical exchanges. As a result the ini- tial mafic composition is no longer detectable in the mixing system after ca. 2 h (i.e. the duration of the ex- periment). A further important result is the observation of highly non-linear patterns in inter-elemental plots produced by the onset of diffusive fractionation processes. This is contrary to common thinking that magma mixing should always produce linear trends between pairs of chemical elements. A new measure, the “concentration variance”, is proposed to quantify chemical element mobility during the mixing process. This measure is statistically robust and can be quantitatively used to measure chemical ele- ment mobility independently of the geometry in which the compositional variation (i.e. transects, areas, etc.) is embedded or the local strain history of the mingling. Our results highlight concentration variance as a robust probe of the as yet poorly-understood processes in- volved in the common petrological process of magma mixing.
2012
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11391/996781
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