Abstract
Energetic ash-producing volcanic eruptions are driven by the diffusive
and decompressive growth of bubbles (mostly water) during ascent in a
magma conduit. The spatial distribution of bubble nucleation sites is
one of the primary controls on ash-forming fragmentation. However, the
initial formation of bubbles in a supersaturated magma is problematical,
especially for homogeneous nucleation. Excessive surface tension
pressure should preclude the existence of small bubbles, because
exsolved water is driven back into the melt. This is the “tiny bubble
paradox.” We suggest that—under special circumstances—the tiny
bubble paradox may be circumvented by spinodal decomposition, a process
in which uphill diffusion enables spontaneous unmixing of phases to
reduce the free energy of the system. As spinodal decomposition
progresses, three dimensional, quasi-spherical, zones of water-rich
magma develop. These zones are characterized by an increasingly high
concentration of dissolved water at the centers and reducing
concentration at the margins. Bubbles are born when the concentration of
water in the interior of the water-rich zones goes to 100% and the
concentration of melt goes to zero. The small, nascent, bubbles that
emerge will be buffered from melt by water-rich shells with increasing
melt concentration away from newly formed bubbles. This diffuse
concentration gradient of water means that there is no surface, per se,
for surface tension to arise. This is the crux of the solution of the
tiny bubble paradox. Particle morphology may be used to distinguish ash
with spinodal origins from ash associated with typical (metastable)
bubble nucleation. Spinodal decomposition occurs at a wavelength
determined by the pressure, temperature, and viscosity of the magmatic
system. This wavelength should create bubbles of uniform size and bubble
walls of equal strength in a fragmenting magmatic foam, leading to
sharply mono-modal vesicle and ash particle size distributions.
Classical bubble nucleation should create more-variable bubble sizes and
bubble wall strengths, leading to a broader particle size distribution.
Better understanding the mechanism of bubble formation in magmatic
systems will, in turn, enable better understanding of hazardous,
explosive, eruptions.