Abstract

In the last 20 years many discretization schemes have been developed to approximate the Darcy fluxes on polyhedral cells in heterogeneous anisotropic porous media. Among them, we can distinguished cell based approaches like the Two Point Flux Approximation (TPFA) or the Multi Point Flux Approximation (MPFA) schemes, face based approaches like the Hybrid Finite Volume (HFV) scheme belonging to the family of Hybrid Mimetic Mixed methods and nodal based discretizations like the Vertex Approximate Gradient (VAG) scheme. They all have their own drawbacks and advantages which typically depend on the type of cells and on the anisotropy of the medium. In this work, we propose a new methodology to combine the VAG and HFV discretizations on arbitrary subsets of cells or faces in order to choose the best suited scheme in different parts of the mesh. In our approach the TPFA discretization is considered as an HFV discretization for which the face unknowns can be eliminated. The coupling strategy is based on a node to face interpolation operator at the interfaces which must be chosen to ensure the consistency, the coercivity and the limit conformity properties of the combined discretization. The convergence analysis is performed in the gradient discretization framework and convergence is proved for arbitrary cell or face partitions of the mesh. For face partitions, an additional stabilisation local to the cell is required to ensure the coercivity while for cell partitions no additional stabilisation is needed. The framework preserves at the interface the discrete conservation properties of the VAG and HFV schemes with fluxes based on local to each cell transmissibility matrices. This discrete conservative form allows to naturally extend the VAG and HFV discretizations of two-phase Darcy flow models to the combined VAG–HFV schemes. The efficiency of our approach is tested for single phase and immiscible two-phase Darcy flows on 3D meshes using a combination of the HFV and VAG discretizations as well as for non-isothermal compositional liquid gas Darcy flows on a vertical 2D cross-section of the Bouillante geothermal reservoir (Guadeloupe) using a combination of the TPFA and VAG discretizations.

Highlights

  • The simulation of compositional multi-phase Darcy flow in heterogeneous porous media plays a major role in many applications

  • A new methodology is introduced in this work to combine face based (HFV or Two Point Flux Approximation (TPFA)) and nodal based (VAG) discretizations on hybrid meshes in order to adapt the numerical scheme to the different types of cells and medium properties in different parts of the mesh

  • The stability and convergence of the combined Vertex Approximate Gradient (VAG)– Hybrid Finite Volume (HFV) schemes is studied in the gradient discretization framework and is shown to hold on arbitrary partitions of the cells for the unstabilised version and on arbitrary partitions of the faces for the stabilised version

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Summary

Introduction

The simulation of compositional multi-phase Darcy flow in heterogeneous porous media plays a major role in many applications. Face based discretizations such as the Hybrid Finite Volume (HFV) scheme [16] belonging to the family of Hybrid Mixed Mimetic (HMM) methods [12], or the Mixed Hybrid Finite Element method, have been developed and adapted to multi-phase Darcy flows in [2, 3] They provide accurate and unconditionally stable discretizations of the Darcy fluxes but, due to the large number of faces, remain rather expensive compared with nodal or cell-centred approaches. The framework preserves the discrete conservation properties of the VAG and HFV schemes with fluxes based on local to each cell transmissibility matrices which size is the number of selected nodes or/and faces on the shared boundary This discrete conservative form leads to a natural extension of the VAG and HFV discretizations of multi-phase Darcy flow models to the combined VAG–HFV schemes. A reference solution, computed on a refined mesh, is compared in terms of accuracy and CPU time with the solutions obtained with the VAG scheme on a triangular mesh and the TPFA scheme on a Voronoi mesh

Two Gradient discretizations combining the VAG and HFV schemes
Polyhedral mesh and partition of the mesh
VAG gradient reconstruction operator
HFV gradient reconstruction operator
Second gradient reconstruction operator in the interface cells
Conservative formulation
Gradient discretization framework
Numerical tests for second order diffusion problems
Red black test case
Combined VAG–HFV discretization of two-phase Darcy flows
Numerical experiments on a one dimensional solution
Hexahedral meshes
Hybrid meshes with hexahedra and pyramids
Non-isothermal compositional two-phase Darcy flow model
Two dimensional Bouillante geothermal test case
Conclusion
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