4.7 Article

Faster geospeedometry: A Monte Carlo approach to relaxational geospeedometry for determining cooling rates of volcanic glasses

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 581, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120385

Keywords

Silicate melts; Glass transition; Kinetics; Thermodynamics; Geospeedometry

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR 1220051, EAR1724581]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study introduces a numerical solver called CoolMonte, which can automatically determine the unknown natural glass cooling rate through a single heat capacity measurement. Compared to traditional methods, CoolMonte saves time and improves the accuracy of cooling rate estimation.
The thermal history of natural glasses is critical to understanding a wide range of geologic processes. Relaxation geospeedometry has been used to infer the cooling rates of naturally formed glasses across a wide range of compositions and geologic settings. However, using the Tool-Narayanaswamy (TN) geospeedometer is time consuming, requiring multiple isobaric heat capacity (C-p) measurements to constrain four sample-specific model parameters, before quantifying natural cooling history of a sample. Here we present a Monte Carlo-inspired numerical solver called CoolMonte, which automates the fitting procedure of experimental C-p measurements, and is capable of determining an unknown cooling rate using a single C-p measurement. We compare quantitative cooling rates of four naturally cooled obsidian lava samples determined using the traditional approach with multiple C-p measurements, to cooling rates determined using a single C-p measurement without sample-specific model calibration. Cooling rates calculated using a single C-p measurement are within 0.1 to 1.3 log(10) K s(-1) of cooling rates determined using multiple C-p measurements. We also assessed CoolMonte using 50 synthetic datasets with known cooling rates (greater than or similar to 0.1 K per year) and 10 previously published natural cooling rates which were reproduced within 0.8 log io K s(-1). CoolMonte reduces the time necessary to determine cooling rates of natural samples, improves the reproducibility of cooling rate estimates, and makes relaxational geospeedometry a more accessible method for the study of thermal histories of geologic systems.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available