Numerous hazards are associated with active lava flows, and USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists have written about many of them in past Volcano Watch articles. However, it’s been awhile since one particular hazard —so-called “methane explosions” — has been addressed.
With lava advancing through lush vegetation along Kilauea volcano’s lower East Rift Zone, these explosions have become a concern. Today’s article draws from a prior Volcano Watch to describe the hazard and to remind folks about its danger.
Here’s the fact: If you approach a lava flow that’s encroaching on vegetation, you risk being greeted by the blast of an explosion.
Depending on how close you are to the advancing flow, your experience could range from hearing a far-away “boom,” to being thrown several yards across hard, abrasive lava as the ground beneath you disintegrates. Regardless of where you’re standing, the sound of these explosions is a call for your respect.
As a lava flow enters grassland or forest, all the biomass in the flow’s path becomes available for one or both of two processes: combustion and/or pyrolysis. Let us explain:
Lava erupted at Kilauea is about 1,150 degrees Celsius (2,100 degrees Fahrenheit) — about four times hotter than your kitchen oven’s maximum temperature. Most natural materials on the ground surface, such as grasses and shrubs, are immediately burned up (combusted) as lava covers the area. But the bases of large trees often are encased in lava, charring the outside trunk, but not completely burning the inside.
When lava advances across the ground, surface vegetation either burns or is buried before it can combust. Intense heat from the lava flow also radiates downward and slowly “cooks” the buried vegetation or subsurface plant matter (for example, roots).
The lava temperature is high enough to accelerate chemical breakdown of biomass as it heats or distills the organic compounds (natural gas) from the buried grass, shrubs, ferns, roots and other vegetation.
A similar process — pyrolysis — cooks wood in large, very hot ovens to make charcoal and another fuel byproduct called “producer gas.” Commercially, the flammable producer gas is extracted and burned to generate heat or electricity.
On Kilauea, producer gas and the gas generated by the lava flow consist of a mixture that includes methane, hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
Beneath molten lava, the gas mixture from “cooked” biomass invades subsurface passages, such as old lava tubes, and below ground cracks and voids. This natural gas, of which methane is just one component, combines with air in these empty spaces to form combustible gas pockets. Recall from high school science that with the right proportions of fuel (such as methane), oxygen (such as air) and heat (such as a match), you can make fire.
When the underground air-fuel mixture is between 5 and 15 volume-percent fuel, a spark — or heat from a lava flow— can ignite it. If ignition occurs in a constricted space, such as an underground void or old lava tube, an explosion might occur.
This is similar to what happens in your car’s engine. As the air-fuel mixture is ignited in the confined space of the engine’s cylinders, the energy released ultimately propels you down the road. Likewise, if you’re standing above a subsurface void when it explodes, you might also be propelled — upward — by the blast.
Natural gas explosions (often called “methane explosions”) can occur beneath an advancing lava flow, thereby throwing molten rock into the air, or beneath old lava, throwing boulders up to a yard (several feet) in diameter skyward. The combustible gas mixture can seep into void spaces tens of meters (yards) from the margin of a lava flow, so it’s important to stay well away from active lava that’s moving through vegetation — especially lush vegetation such as that on Kilauea’s lower East Rift Zone.
Subsurface natural gas also can seep passively to the surface. With heat from molten lava, methane can burn with blue flames — such as those recently observed on and near the current lava flows.
Numerous methane explosions have occurred during the past 35-plus years of Kilauea’s ongoing eruption — and some have resulted in injuries to unwary spectators standing too close to hot lava on vegetated land. But it’s easy to avoid this hazard. Keep a safe distance — and respect any “booms” you hear. They’re trying to tell you something.
Volcano Activity Updates
On Kilauea volcano’s East Rift Zone, low-level eruption of lava continues from multiple points along the active fissure system. Residents in the lower Puna District should remain informed and heed Hawaii County Civil Defense closures, warnings and messages (http://www.hawaiicounty.gov/active-alerts).
At Kilauea’s summit, multiple explosions continue to occur daily, with some sending plumes of ash up to 8,000 feet above sea level or higher. With prevailing trade winds this past week, the ash clouds were largely blown to the southwest, resulting in trace amounts of ash falling on downwind areas. Summit activity could again become more explosive, increasing the intensity of ash production and producing ballistic projectiles close to the vent. Communities downwind should be prepared for ashfall as long as this activity continues.
Mauna Loa is not erupting. Rates of deformation and seismicity have not changed significantly during the past week. The number of monthly and weekly earthquakes recorded beneath the volcano has decreased to near background levels.
Eleven earthquakes were reported felt in Hawaii during the past week. Many were related to continued deflation at Kilauea’s summit and with the ongoing intrusion of magma into the volcano’s East Rift Zone. The largest was a magnitude-5 earthquake at 6:15 p.m. May 16, located 5 kilometers (3 miles) southwest of Volcano and at a shallow depth.
Visit HVO’s website (https://volcanoes.usgs.gov/hvo) for past Volcano Watch articles, Kilauea daily eruption updates, Mauna Loa weekly updates, volcano photos, maps, recent earthquake info, and more. Call for summary updates at 967-8862 (Kilauea) or 967-8866 (Mauna Loa). Email questions to askHVO@usgs.gov.
Volcano Watch (https://volcanoes.usgs.gov/hvo/hvo_volcano_watch.html) is a weekly article and activity update written by U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists and affiliates.