Publication Date:
2017-04-04
Description:
The most tragic event of gas driven lake eruption occurred at Lake Nyos (Cameroon) on 21
August 1986, when a dense cloud of CO2 suffocated more than 1700 people and an uncounted
number of animals in just one night. The event stimulated a series of researches aimed to
understand gas origins, gas release mechanisms and strategies for gas hazard mitigation. Very
few studies have been carried out for describing the transport of dense CO2 clouds in the
atmosphere.
Although from a theoretical point of view, gas dispersion can be fully studied by solving the
complete equations system for mass, momentum and energy transport, in actual practice,
different simplified models able to describe only specific phases or aspects have to be used. In
order to simulate dispersion of a heavy gas and to assess the consequent hazard we used a
model based on a shallow layer approach (TWODEE2). This technique which uses depthaveraged
variables to describe the flow behavior of dense gas over complex topography
represents a good compromise between the complexity of computational fluid dynamic models
and the simpler integral models.
Recently the model has been applied for simulating CO2 dispersion from natural gas emissions
in Central Italy. The results have shown how the dispersion pattern is strongly affected by the
intensity of gas release, the topography and the ambient wind speed.
Here for the first time we applied TWODEE2 code to simulate the dispersion of the large CO2
clouds released by limnic eruptions.
An application concerns the case of the 1986 event at lake Nyos. Some difficulties for the
simulations were related to the lack of quantitative information: gas flux estimations are not well
constrained, meteorological conditions are only qualitatively known, the digital model of the
terrain is of poor quality. Different scenarios were taken into account in order to reproduce the
qualitative observations available for such episode. The observations regard mainly the effects
of gas on the people living in the surrounding areas. Simulation results are in good agreement
with these observations.
Another application is focused on a hypothetical gas release from lake Albano (Italy), a volcanic
lake that probably degassed on the past as reported in historical chronicles by the Roman
historian Titus Livius. At the present time the lake is far from saturation conditions and the
occurrence of such an event is impossible. However a recent re-interpretation of literature data
clearly show the presence of anomalous CO2 enrichment of the lake waters during the last
seismic crisis which affected the area. For these reasons a future limnic eruption can not be
ruled out completely. The simulations we present show the potential effect of a gas driven
eruption from lake Albano in this densely populated area located 20 km south-east from the centre of Rome.
Description:
Published
Description:
S.Francisco California USA
Description:
1.2. TTC - Sorveglianza geochimica delle aree vulcaniche attive
Description:
open
Keywords:
Modeling CO2
;
gas
;
eruptions
;
04. Solid Earth::04.04. Geology::04.04.12. Fluid Geochemistry
;
04. Solid Earth::04.08. Volcanology::04.08.06. Volcano monitoring
;
05. General::05.08. Risk::05.08.01. Environmental risk
Repository Name:
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
Type:
Conference paper
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