Abstract
Multiphase flow in porous media is important in a number of environmental and industrial applications such as soil remediation, CO2 sequestration, and enhanced oil recovery. Wetting properties control flow of immiscible fluids in porous media and fluids distribution in the pore space. In contrast to the strong and weak wet conditions, pore-scale physics of immiscible displacement under intermediate-wet conditions is less understood. This study reports the results of a series of two-dimensional high-resolution direct numerical simulations with the aim of understanding the pore-scale dynamics of two-phase immiscible fluid flow under intermediate-wet conditions. Our results show that for intermediate-wet porous media, pore geometry has a strong influence on interface dynamics, leading to co-existence of concave and convex interfaces. Intermediate wettability leads to various interfacial movements which are not identified under imbibition or drainage conditions. These pore-scale events significantly influence macro-scale flow behaviour causing the counter-intuitive decline in recovery of the defending fluid from weak imbibition to intermediate-wet conditions.
Highlights
The numerical domain was first converted into triangulated surface geometry, which was later discretised into small elements by means of the mesh generator in OpenFoam[16]
We conducted a comprehensive series of investigation by means of direct numerical simulation to delineate the pore-scale mechanisms controlling immiscible two-phase flow in porous media under different wettability scenarios with a particular focus on intermediate-wet conditions which has been rarely discussed in literature
Inspection and visualization of our numerical results enabled us to gain insights on the complex pore level dynamics controlling the displacement mechanisms as a function of wetting properties of porous media and the resulting macroscopic displacement patterns that emerge
Summary
The numerical domain was first converted into triangulated surface geometry, which was later discretised into small elements by means of the mesh generator in OpenFoam[16]. The final arrangement of these elements was almost unstructured, near the grain surface it was split-hexahedrals and hexahedrals elsewhere[16]. The meshing algorithm employed in this research has been successfully used by Ferrari et al.[33]. According to the grid independence analysis performed in Rabbani et al.[30], the optimum size of the spatial element chosen for the computational domains scaled with respect to the average pore size was 0
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