Published in

American Geophysical Union, Geophysical Research Letters, 21(40), p. 5658-5664, 2013

DOI: 10.1002/2013gl058105

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Volcanic sintering: Timescales of viscous densification and strength recovery

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Sintering and densification are ubiquitous processes influencing the emplacement of both effusive and explo-sive products of volcanic eruptions. Here we sinter ash-size fragments of a synthetic National Institute of Standards and Technology viscosity standard glass at temperatures at which the resultant melt has a viscosity of 8 –10 9 Pa.s at 1 bar to assess sintering dynamics under near-surface vol-canic conditions. We track the strength recovery via uniaxial compressive tests. We observe that volcanic ash sintering is dominantly time dependent, temperature dependent, and grain size dependent and may thus be interpreted to be controlled by melt viscosity and surface tension. Sintering evolves from particle agglutination to viscous pore collapse and is accompanied by a reduction in connected porosity and an increase in isolated pores. Sintering and densification result in a nonlinear increase in strength. Micromechani-cal modeling shows that the pore-emanated crack model explains the strength of porous lava as a function of pore fraction and size.