THE EFFECT OF FLUORINE ON THE VISCOSITY OF DACITIC MELTS: PRELIMINARY RESULTS
In our experiments, we synthesize iron-free dacitic liquids from oxide and carbonate powders, and incorporate fluorine by using varying amounts of calcium fluoride instead of calcium carbonate. The nominal fluorine contents of the liquids are 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 weight percent. After decarbonation, and repeated cycles of melting and grinding to ensure homogeneity, the samples are quenched to a glass. Cylindrical cores are drilled from the glass and the viscosity measured by parallel plate viscometry, over the range 109 to 1012.5 Pa.s. For the dacites, this corresponds to temperatures between about 700 and 840?C, i.e. relevant magmatic temperatures.
At 800°C, the viscosity of fluorine-absent dacite is 1010.79 Pa.s. Our preliminary results indicate that addition of 0.5 wt.% and 1 wt.% fluorine decreases the viscosity by factors of about 3 and 8, to 1010.34 and 109.91 Pa.s, respectively. This compares with a viscosity of about 105.5 Pa.s for the same dacite containing 1 wt.% H2O. Even on a mole percent basis, water is far more efficient at reducing the viscosity of dacitic liquids than fluorine. This suggests that dissolution mechanisms other than simple depolymerization of the silicate network are operating. Ongoing experiments will test the effect of higher fluorine contents, and the effect of fluorine on more polymerized rhyodacitic melts.