Interfacial velocities and capillary pressure gradients during Haines jumps

被引:190
作者
Armstrong, Ryan T. [1 ]
Berg, Steffen [1 ]
机构
[1] Shell Global Solut Int BV, NL-2288 GS Rijswijk, Netherlands
来源
PHYSICAL REVIEW E | 2013年 / 88卷 / 04期
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
FLUID DISPLACEMENT; PERCOLATION;
D O I
10.1103/PhysRevE.88.043010
中图分类号
O35 [流体力学]; O53 [等离子体物理学];
学科分类号
070204 [等离子体物理]; 070301 [无机化学];
摘要
Drainage is typically understood as a process where the pore space is invaded by a nonwetting phase pore-by-pore, the controlling parameters of which are represented by capillary number and mobility ratio. However, what is less understood and where experimental data are lacking is direct knowledge of the dynamics of pore drainage and the associated intrinsic time scales since the rate dependencies often observed with displacement processes are potentially dependent on these time scales. Herein, we study pore drainage events with a high speed camera in a micromodel system and analyze the dependency of interfacial velocity on bulk flow rate and spatial fluid configurations. We find that pore drainage events are cooperative, meaning that capillary pressure differences which extend over multiple pores directly affect fluid topology and menisci dynamics. Results suggest that not only viscous forces but also capillarity acts in a nonlocal way. Lastly, the existence of a pore morphological parameter where pore drainage transitions from capillary to inertial and/or viscous dominated is discussed followed by a discussion on capillary dispersion and time scale dependencies. We show that the displacement front is disperse when volumetric flow rate is less than the intrinsic time scale for a pore drainage event and becomes sharp when the flow rate is greater than the intrinsic time scale (i.e., overruns the pore drainage event), which clearly shows how pore-scale parameters influence macroscale flow behavior.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 13 条
[1]
Armstrong R. T., 1990, P INT S SOC COR AN A
[2]
Linking pore-scale interfacial curvature to column-scale capillary pressure [J].
Armstrong, Ryan T. ;
Porter, Mark L. ;
Wildenschild, Dorthe .
ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2012, 46 :55-62
[3]
Real-time 3D imaging of Haines jumps in porous media flow [J].
Berg, Steffen ;
Ott, Holger ;
Klapp, Stephan A. ;
Schwing, Alex ;
Neiteler, Rob ;
Brussee, Niels ;
Makurat, Axel ;
Leu, Leon ;
Enzmann, Frieder ;
Schwarz, Jens-Oliver ;
Kersten, Michael ;
Irvine, Sarah ;
Stampanoni, Marco .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2013, 110 (10) :3755-3759
[4]
Percolation theory and network modeling applications in soil physics [J].
Berkowitz, B ;
Ewing, RP .
SURVEYS IN GEOPHYSICS, 1998, 19 (01) :23-72
[5]
Acoustic measurements of pore-scale displacements [J].
DiCarlo, DA ;
Cidoncha, JIG ;
Hickey, C .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2003, 30 (17)
[6]
FATT I, 1956, T AM I MIN MET ENG, V207, P144
[7]
Interfacial jumps and pressure bursts during fluid displacement in interacting irregular capillaries [J].
Moebius, Franziska ;
Or, Dani .
JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE, 2012, 377 :406-415
[8]
Mohanty K. K., 1987, SPE RESERVOIR ENG, V9406, P113
[9]
PHYSICS AND THERMODYNAMICS OF CAPILLARY ACTION IN POROUS MEDIA [J].
MORROW, NR .
INDUSTRIAL AND ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY, 1970, 62 (06) :32-&
[10]
A numerical experiment on pore size, pore connectivity, water retention, permeability, and solute transport using network models [J].
Vogel, HJ .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 2000, 51 (01) :99-105