G
Giovanni Chiodini
Researcher at National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology
Publications - 218
Citations - 11892
Giovanni Chiodini is an academic researcher from National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Volcano & Caldera. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 196 publications receiving 10123 citations. Previous affiliations of Giovanni Chiodini include University of Perugia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Domuyo volcanic system: An enormous geothermal resource in Argentine Patagonia
Giovanni Chiodini,Caterina Liccioli,Orlando Vaselli,Sergio Calabrese,Franco Tassi,Stefano Caliro,Alberto Tomás Caselli,Mariano Roberto Agusto,Walter D'Alessandro +8 more
TL;DR: A geochemical survey of the main thermal waters discharging in the southwestern part of the Domuyo volcanic complex (Argentina), where the latest volcanic activity dates to 0.11-Ma, has highlighted the extraordinarily high heat loss from this remote site in Patagonia as discussed by the authors.
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Reservoir Structure and Hydraulic Properties of the Campi Flegrei Geothermal System Inferred by Audiomagnetotelluric, Geochemical, and Seismicity Study
Agata Siniscalchi,Simona Tripaldi,Gerardo Romano,Giovanni Chiodini,Luigi Improta,Zaccaria Petrillo,Luca D'Auria,Stefano Caliro,Rosario Avino +8 more
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Numerical model of gas dispersion emitted from volcanic sources
TL;DR: In this paper, an Eulerian model for passive gas dispersion based on the K-theory for turbulent diffusion, coupled with a mass consistent wind model is presented, which can be used to forecast gas concentration over large and complex terrains.
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Diffuse soil emission of hydrothermal gases (CO2, CH4, and C6H6) at Solfatara crater (Campi Flegrei, southern Italy)
Franco Tassi,Barbara Nisi,Carlo Cardellini,Francesco Capecchiacci,Marco Donnini,Orlando Vaselli,Rosario Avino,Giovanni Chiodini +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured soil fluxes of hydrothermal gases, with special emphasis on C 6 H 6, as well as chemical composition of mono-aromatic compounds in fumaroles and air, were carried out in April 2012 at the Solfatara crater (Campi Flegrei, Southern Italy) to investigate the distribution and behavior of these species as they migrate through the soil from their deep source to the atmosphere.
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A New Web‐Based Catalog of Earth Degassing Sites in Italy
TL;DR: In Italy, high-temperature gases are released by crater plumes and fumaroles in volcanic environments throughout Italy as discussed by the authors, which are located in a large area, mainly in the western sector of central and southern Italy.