Abstract

In this paper, porous sintered glass bead packings are studied, using X-ray Computed Tomography (XRCT) images at 16,upmu hbox {m} voxel resolution, to obtain not only the porosity field, but also other properties like particle sizes, pore throats and the permeability. The influence of the sintering procedure and the original particle size distributions on the microstructure, and thus on the hydraulic properties, is analyzed in detail. The XRCT data are visualized and studied by advanced image filtering and analysis algorithms on to the extracted sub-systems (cubes of different sizes) to determine the correlations between the microstructure and the measured macroscopic hydraulic parameters. Since accurate permeability measurements are not simple, special focus lies on the experimental set up and procedure, for which a new innovative multi-purpose cell based on a modular concept is presented. Furthermore, segmented voxel-based images (defining the microstructure) are used for 3D (three-dimensional) lattice Boltzmann simulations to directly compute some of the properties in the creeping flow regime. A very good agreement between experimental and numerical porosity and permeability could be achieved, in most cases, validating the numerical model and results. Porosity and permeability gradients along the sample height could be related to gravity acting during sintering. Furthermore, porosity increases in the outer zones of the samples due to the different contact geometry between the beads and the confining cylinder wall during sintering (which is replaced by a membrane during permeability testing to close these pores at the surface of the sample). The influence of different filters on the gray scale distributions and the impact of the segmentation procedure on porosity and permeability is systematically studied. The complex relationships and dependencies between numerically determined permeabilities and hydraulic influence parameters are investigated carefully. In accordance to the well-known Kozeny–Carman model, a similar trend for local permeability values in dependence on porosity and particle diameter is obtained. Other than statistical models, which estimate the pore throat distribution on the basis of the particle size distribution, in this study XRCT scans are used to determine the pore throats in sintered granular systems, which are finally linked to the intrinsic permeability through the lattice Boltzmann simulations. From the mu XRCT analysis two distinct peaks in pore throat distributions could be identified, which can be clearly assigned to typical pore throat areas occurring in polydisperse granular systems. Moreover, a linear dependency between average pore throat diameter and porosity as well as between permeability and pore throat diameter is reported. Furthermore, almost identical mean values for porosity and permeability are found from sub-system and full-system REV analysis. For sintered granular systems, the empirical constant in the classical Kozeny–Carman model is determined to be 131, while a value of 180 is expected for perfect mono-disperse sphere packings.

Highlights

  • Numerical and experimental investigations of fluid flow in porous and granular media are of crucial importance in many research areas, such as the recovery of hydrocarbons from oil reservoirs [4,5], ground water flow [6] or gas diffusion in fuel cells [7]

  • A comparison with numerical determined permeability values based on Micro-X-Ray-Computer-Tomographic images can increase the understanding of the effects of microstructure on the intrinsic permeability [12,13,14]

  • In this work we investigate, both experimentally and numerically, the intrinsic permeability of artificial produced samples composed of sintered glass beads showing different particle diameters, porosities and degree of polydispersity

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Summary

Introduction

Numerical and experimental investigations of fluid flow in porous and granular media are of crucial importance in many research areas, such as the recovery of hydrocarbons from oil reservoirs [4,5], ground water flow [6] or gas diffusion in fuel cells [7]. An experimentally and numerically determinable parameter of porous materials is the intrinsic permeability which is highly sensitive to the underlying microstructure. The effective intrinsic permeability depends only on the pore structure of the medium, that is independent of the properties of the fluid. A comparison with numerical determined permeability values based on Micro-X-Ray-Computer-Tomographic (μXRCT) images can increase the understanding of the effects of microstructure on the intrinsic permeability [12,13,14]. The typical workflow of μXRCT-based permeability investigations comprises

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