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Microphysical Effects of Water Content and Temperature on the Triboelectrification of Volcanic Ash on Long Time Scales

Joshua Méndez Harper, Leah Courtland, Josef Dufek, Julian McAdams

2020Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The effects of water and temperature on the triboelectrification of granular materials have been reported by numerous authors, but have not been studied robustly in the context of volcanic plumes. Here, we present the results of a set of experiments designed to elucidate how environmental conditions modulate the triboelectric characteristics of volcanic ash in the upper region of the convective column. We find that small amounts of water can reduce the charge collected by submillimeter‐sized ash grains by up to an order of magnitude. Increasing temperature at a constant relative humidity also appears to decrease the amount of charge gained by particles. Analysis of our data shows that if particles undergo low‐energy, low‐frequency collisions in humid environments under minute‐long time scales, charge dissipation dominates over charge accumulation. Thus, our work suggests that triboelectric charging may be an inefficient electrification mechanism outside of the gas‐thrust region where collision energies and rates are high and residence times are low.

Topics & Concepts

Triboelectric effectRelative humidityContext (archaeology)Volcanic ashAtmospheric sciencesEnvironmental scienceVolcanoDissipationCharge (physics)HumidityAerosolResidence time (fluid dynamics)ConvectionAir temperatureMeteorologyImpact craterSolar constantWork (physics)Fly ashElectrificationWater contentMineralogyMaterials scienceAirflowInterceptionWater vaporWater balanceEnvironmental engineeringAerosol Filtration and Electrostatic PrecipitationRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesGranular flow and fluidized beds
Microphysical Effects of Water Content and Temperature on the Triboelectrification of Volcanic Ash on Long Time Scales | Litcius