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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Pore-scale displacement mechanisms as a source of hysteresis for two-phase flow in porous media

TLDR
In this paper, the Euler characteristic of the nonwetting phase (χn) is used as a shape measure of displacement fronts to characterize the hysteretic behavior of two-phase flow in porous media.
Abstract
The macroscopic description of the hysteretic behavior of two-phase flow in porous media remains a challenge. It is not obvious how to represent the underlying pore-scale processes at the Darcy-scale in a consistent way. Darcy-scale thermodynamic models do not completely eliminate hysteresis and our findings indicate that the shape of displacement fronts is an additional source of hysteresis that has not been considered before. This is a shortcoming because effective process behavior such as trapping efficiency of CO2 or oil production during water flooding are directly linked to pore-scale displacement mechanisms with very different front shape such as capillary fingering, flat frontal displacement, or cluster growth. Here we introduce fluid topology, expressed by the Euler characteristic of the nonwetting phase (χn), as a shape measure of displacement fronts. Using two high-quality data sets obtained by fast X-ray tomography, we show that χn is hysteretic between drainage and imbibition and characteristic for the underlying displacement pattern. In a more physical sense, the Euler characteristic can be interpreted as a parameter describing local fluid connectedness. It may provide the closing link between a topological characterization and macroscopic formulations of two-phase immiscible displacement in porous rock. Since fast X-ray tomography is currently becoming a mature technique, we expect a significant growth in high-quality data sets of real time fluid displacement processes in the future. The novel measures of fluid topology presented here have the potential to become standard metrics needed to fully explore them.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamics of snap-off and pore-filling events during two-phase fluid flow in permeable media.

TL;DR: It is shown that the time-scales of interface movement and brine layer swelling leading to snap-off are several minutes, orders of magnitude slower than observed for Haines jumps in drainage, and the local capillary pressure increases rapidly aftersnap-off as the trapped phase finds a position that is a new local energy minimum.
Journal ArticleDOI

Porous Media Characterization Using Minkowski Functionals: Theories, Applications and Future Directions

TL;DR: The theoretical basis of the Minkowski functionals, mathematical theorems and methods necessary for porous media characterization, common measurement errors when using micro-CT data and recent findings relating the MF to macroscale porous media properties are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Imaging and Measurement of Pore-Scale Interfacial Curvature to Determine Capillary Pressure Simultaneously With Relative Permeability

TL;DR: In this article, a method using pore-scale imaging to determine capillary pressure from local interfacial curvature was proposed, in combination with pressure drop measurements, allowing both relative permeabilities and capillary pressures to be determined during steady state coinjection of two phases through the core.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geometric state function for two-fluid flow in porous media

TL;DR: In this article, the geometric state of fluids within porous media can be expressed in terms of a relationship that links the fluid volume, surface area, mean curvature, and Euler characteristic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pore-Scale Characterization of Two-Phase Flow Using Integral Geometry

TL;DR: The pore-scale morphological description of two-phase flow is fundamental to the understanding of relative permeability as discussed by the authors, and phase morphologies are quantified using Minkowski Functionals and the relative percolation is measured using an image-based method where lattice Boltzmann simulations are conducted on connected phases from porescale images.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical models and experiments on immiscible displacements in porous media

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the results of network simulators (100 × 100 and 25 × 25 pores) based on the physical rules of the displacement at the pore scale, and they show the existence of the three basic domains (capillary fingering, viscous fingering and stable displacement) within which the patterns remain unchanged.
BookDOI

Vorlesungen über Inhalt, Oberfläche und Isoperimetrie

Hugo Hadwiger
TL;DR: In this article, a vorliegende Buch vereinigt in seinen wesentlichen Teilen den Stoff verschiedener Vorlesungen liber Inhaltstheorie, isoperimetrische Probleme and liber konvexe Karper and allgemeine Integralgeometrie, which ich im Laufe der letten yearre an der Universitat Bern gehalten habe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies in the physical properties of soil. V. The hysteresis effect in capillary properties, and the modes of moisture distribution associated therewith

TL;DR: In this paper, a recapitulation of the main features of the moisture distribution in an ideal soil is given in order to emphasise a point previously neglected, namely, that the changes are not in the main strictly reversible, but fall into two series corresponding to the two directions of moisture change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of the displacement of one fluid by another in a network of capillary ducts

TL;DR: In this paper, the mechanisms of displacement of one fluid by another were investigated in an etched network, where both fluids are simultaneously present in a duct, the wetting fluid remaining in the extreme corners of the cross-section.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermodynamic basis of capillary pressure in porous media

TL;DR: In this paper, a thermodynamic approach to the definition of capillary pressure provides a theoretically sound alternative to the simple hysteretic function of saturation, and an approach is presented whereby the presence of interfaces and their distribution within a multiphase system are essential to describing the state of the system under study.
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