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Publication
Featured researches published by Ryo Komatsu.
Geothermics | 1998
Nobuo Doi; Osamu Kato; Ken Ikeuchi; Ryo Komatsu; Shin-ichi Miyazaki; Kohei Akaku; Toshihiro Uchida
The Kakkonda plutonic-hydrothermal system has as its heat source the Quaternary Kakkonda granite. The Kakkonda granite has a thick (∼1.3 km) contact-metamorphic zone, known mainly from the geothermal survey well WD-1a (total depth: 3729 m) drilled by the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO). The Kakkonda granite is a stock several tens of square kilometers in area with an upper contact about 1.5–3 km deep. It is a composite pluton varying from tonalite to granite. The early-stage granitic rocks are slightly metamorphosed to biotite grade by late-stage granitic rocks. K-Ar ages of separated minerals from the granitic rocks in both stages show the same cooling ages of 0.24–0.11 Ma for hornblende, 0.21–0.02 Ma for biotite, and 0.14–0.01 Ma for potassium feldspar. These are the youngest ages for granite in the world. The K-Ar ages become almost zero at ∼580°C for biotite and potassium feldspar, and at ∼350°C for illite. The Kakkonda granite intruded into a regional stress field in which the minimum principal stress was ENE–WSW and nearly horizontal. The regional stress field coincides with that of a previously recognized F2 fracture system before ∼0.4–0.3 Ma. Both stages of the Kakkonda granite and the contact aureole are fractured by recent tectonism, resulting in a zone of hydrothermal convection from about 2.5–3.1 km depth up to the surface. The boundary between the zone of hydrothermal convection and the underlying zone of heat conduction occurs ∼250–550 m below the upper contact of the Kakkonda granite, and has a temperature of ∼380–400°C.
Geothermics | 1998
Kaichiro Kasai; Yukihiro Sakagawa; Ryo Komatsu; Munetake Sasaki; Kohei Akaku; Toshihiro Uchida
Abstract Hypersaline metal-rich liquid (ca. 40 wt% total chloride species) was obtained from a depth of 3708 m in the Kakkonda geothermal system. Sampling of well WD-1a was conducted by reverse circulation after a standing time of about 196 hours (with temperature recovering to >500°C). Tritium content and the relationship between δD and δ18O showed that the river water that was circulated in the well had mixed with an isotopically heavy fluid during the standing time. Phase separation occurred during temperature recovery, concentrating the hypersaline liquid in the bottom of the well. This original hypersaline liquid has a salinity of about 55 wt% NaCl eq., consisting of Na–Fe–K–Mn–Ca chloride, rich in Zn and Pb but poor in Cu, Au and Ag. The fluid originates from the Kakkonda granite and mixed with circulating water from the well in a zone of fine fractures induced by thermal stress during drilling.
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2003
Munetake Sasaki; Koichiro Fujimoto; Takayuki Sawaki; Hitoshi Tsukamoto; Osamu Kato; Ryo Komatsu; Nobuo Doi; Masakatsu Sasada
Abstract A 3729-m-deep geothermal research well, WD-1a, provides us with a unique opportunity to study initial petrographic features of a high-temperature granite just after solidification of magma. The well succeeded in collecting three spot-cores of the Kakkonda Granite that is a pluton emplaced at a shallow depth and regarded as a heat source of the active Kakkonda geothermal system. The core samples were collected at the present formation temperatures of 370, 410 and over 500°C. These samples are granodiorite to tonalite consisting mainly of plagioclase, quartz, hornblende, biotite and K-feldspar. A sample collected at a formation temperature of over 500°C possesses the following remarkable petrographic features compared to the other two samples. Interstitial spaces are not completely sealed. K-feldspar exhibits no perthite by the exsolution of albite lamella. Quartz includes glassy melt inclusions without devitrification. Hornblende is less intensively altered to actinolite, and biotite is not altered. This study directly confirmed that perthite in K-feldspar is a recrystallization texture formed at 410–500°C based on a comparison of the in situ temperatures of the samples. Chemical compositions of minerals were analyzed to compare temperatures determined from geothermometers in several publications to the in situ temperatures of the samples.
Geochemical Journal | 2000
Yoichi Muramatsu; Ryo Komatsu; Takayuki Sawaki; Munetake Sasaki; Shigeo Yanagiya
Journal of Mineralogy, Petrology and Economic Geology | 1996
Yoichi Muramatsu; Ryo Komatsu
Resource Geology | 2003
Munetake Sasaki; Koichiro Fujimoto; Hitoshi Tsukamoto; Takayuki Sawaki; Masakatsu Sasada; Masanori Kurosawa; Masahiko Yagi; Yoichi Muramatsu; Osamu Kato; Ryo Komatsu; Kaichiro Kasai; Nobuo Doi
Resource Geology | 1999
Yoichi Muramatsu; Ryo Komatsu
Shigen-Chishitsu | 1997
Yoichi Muramatsu; Ryo Komatsu; Takayuki Sawaki; Munetake Sasaki
Journal of the Geothermal Research Society of Japan | 1999
Takayuki Sawaki; Munetake Sasaki; Ryo Komatsu; Yoichi Muramatsu; Masakatsu Sasada
Journal of the Geothermal Research Society of Japan | 1998
Ryo Komatsu; Ken Ikeuchi; Nobuo Doi; Munetake Sasaki; Toshihiro Uchida; Masakatsu Sasada
Collaboration
Dive into the Ryo Komatsu's collaboration.
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNew Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNew Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNew Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization
View shared research outputsNew Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization
View shared research outputs