Thermal Radiative Properties of Bardarbunga Basalts: Importance of
Emissivity in Magma Rheology and Volcanic Hazard.
Abstract
Temperature (T) is a key parameter controlling the rheology of lava
flows. Since hazardous behavior of eruptions prevents direct
measurements of hot magmatic bodies [1], the temperature is mostly
retrieved by measuring the infrared (IR) radiance of the lava flow [2,
3]. The determination of T is however subjected to important errors
related to the poor knowledge of one of the most critical parameters,
namely spectral emissivity (ε). In this study, we explored the
temperature–emissivity relationship for basaltic magmas, mostly from
the 2014–2015 Holuhraun eruption. We performed in situ spectral
emissivity measurements at relevant magmatic temperatures (from room
temperature up to 1800 K) over a wide spectral range (400–8000 cm−1)
covering TIR, MIR and SWIR regions, using a non-contact IR emissivity
apparatus [4]. To unravel the complex radiative behavior of basalts
with temperature evolution, structural, chemical and textural analyses
(SEM, EMPA, Raman spectroscopy, DSC, XRD, and TEM) were systematically
performed. Our results show that spectral emissivity varies accordingly
with temperature, wavenumber, and is greatly affected by micro-scale
crystallization, emphasizing the effect of small change in silicate
structure on magma radiative properties. Because of the multiphase
nature of lava, each constitutive phase (glass, melt, crystal, vesicles)
contribute differently to the spectral emissivity. The evaluation and
quantification of the impact of these phases on effective thermal
radiative properties is a key point to improve the accuracy of lava T
determination. These new data will ultimately improve our knowledge of
the complex lava flow properties that are crucial in thermo-rheological
models for hazard assessment [5]. References: [1] Kolzenburg et
al. 2017. Bull. Volc. 79:45. [2] Harris, A. 2013: Cambridge
University press. 728. [3] Rogic et al. 2019 Remote Sens., 11, 662
[4] De Sousa Meneses et al. 2015. Infrared Physics & Technology 69.
[5] Thompson and Ramsey, 2021, Bulletin of Volcanology, 83:41.
Keywords: Spectral emissivity, temperature, IR spectroscopy, rheology,
basalt