Abstract

It is a challenging task to predict and analyse the transient flow physics in unconventional complex geological formations such as coal seams. This is due to the multi-scale multi-physics nature of processes taking place in coal seam gas reservoirs. Therefore, numerical tools allowing the incorporation of various flow physics inherent to coal into the simulation routine are of particular importance. At the pore-scale, the rock images obtained by micro-computed tomography are frequently used for flow modelling in porous or fractured media by direct numerical simulations (Lattice Boltzman method or by solving Navier Stokes equations) or by utilising so-called pore-network modelling. Both methods have advantages and drawbacks, while their hybridisation may allow us avoid some of the major pitfalls. Due to a limited number of research dedicated to image-based pore-scale modelling in coal, we develop a hybrid numerical model that combines the Hagen-Poiseuille analytical solution and the volume of fluid advection scheme for fluid flow in fractures with the continuum Darcy flow in the coal matrix. The explicit coupling of fluid flow across the fracture-matrix domains is implemented via corresponding source terms in the governing equations. Besides, additional physics including sorption and matrix swelling-shrinkage phenomena are introduced into the numerical model. The hybrid solver is validated against analytical solutions and a previously developed Darcy-Brinkman-Stokes framework, which has similar functionality for modelling fluid flow in coal seams. To validate the developed model and show its capability to capture multi-scale multi-physics flow in coal, several illustrative simulations are conducted using synthetic and realistic digital images of coal. As a result, the accuracy of the hybrid solver was within 4% when compared to the Darcy-Brinkman-Stokes framework for flow simulation on realistic geometry. Besides, the non-parallelised hybrid model outperformed the parallelised direct numerical simulation, being more than 90 times faster in terms of computational time. The findings are beneficial for conducting larger core-scale simulations of multi-scale multi-physics flow in coal seams with potential applications to natural gas production, hydrogen storage, and carbon dioxide geosequestration.

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