Abstract

AbstractThe presence of solute concentration fluctuations at spatial scales much below the scale of resolution is a major challenge for modeling reactive transport in porous media. Overlooking small‐scale fluctuations, which is the usual procedure, often results in strong disagreements between field observations and model predictions, including, but not limited to, the overestimation of effective reaction rates. Existing innovative approaches that account for local reactant segregation do not provide a general mathematical formulation for the generation, transport, and decay of these fluctuations and their impact on chemical reactions. We propose a Lagrangian formulation based on the random motion of fluid particles carrying solute concentrations whose departure from the local mean is relaxed through multirate interaction by exchange with the mean (MRIEM). We derive and analyze the macroscopic descriptionof the local concentration covariance that emerges from the model, showing its potential to simulate the dynamics of mixing‐limited processes. The action of hydrodynamic dispersion on coarse‐scale concentration gradients is responsible for the production of local concentration covariance, whereas covariance destruction stems from the local mixing process represented by the MRIEM formulation. The temporal evolution of integrated mixing metrics in two simple scenarios shows the trends that characterize fully resolved physical systems, such as a late‐time power law decay of the relative importance of incomplete mixing with respect to the total mixing. Experimental observations of mixing‐limited reactive transport are successfully reproduced by the model.

Highlights

  • The inherent difficulty of properly representing the interaction of reactive chemicals occurring over multiple spatio-temporal scales in complex hydrodynamic settings renders reactive transport modeling in porous media a major challenge in subsurface hydrology [Dentz et al, 2011; Sanchez-Vila and Fernàndez-Garcia, 2016; Benson et al, 2017; Valocchi et al, 2019]

  • We propose a parallel multi-rate interaction by exchange with the mean (MRIEM), based on representing local mixing as occurring within different virtual zones i = 1, . . . , NZ, each being sampled by a fraction ηi of the particle ( i ηi = 1)

  • The proposed Lagrangian model can be extended to reactive transport applications by following the premise that chemical reactions occur at the local scale and are controlled exclusively by local concentrations defined on Lagrangian particles

Read more

Summary

Key Points:

Development of a new approach to reactive transport modeling that accounts for the dynamics of small-scale concentration fluctuations. The temporal evolution of integrated mixing metrics agrees with the characteristic trends of fully-resolved systems. Experimental observations of mixing-limited reactive transport are successfully reproduced. This is the author manuscript accepted for publication and has undergone full peer review but has not been through the copyediting, typesetting, pagination and proofreading process, which

Introduction
Conservative transport and mixing
Reactive transport
Kinetic reactions
Equilibrium reactions
Concentration fluctuation dynamics
Local concentration covariance PDE
Analytical solutions
Continuous injection
Pulse injection
Reproducing results of reactive transport benchmark experiments
G02: Instantaneous equilibrium reaction
RK00: Bilinear kinetic reaction
Summary and conclusions
A: Local-scale mixing event model
Smooth approximation for the local average
Binning
Kernel smoothing
Numerical dispersion and relation with other formulations
C: Relation between local averages of Eulerian and Lagrangian derivatives
Governing equation for the local concentration covariance
Analytical expressions for the mixing state
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.