Abstract

AbstractFluid displacement fronts in porous media exhibit a peculiar duality; the seemingly regular macroscopic motion of the front is propelled by numerous and irregular pore scale interfacial jumps. These pore scale events shape emergent front morphology, affect phase entrapment behind a front, and are likely important for colloidal mobilization and solute dispersion at the front. We present an experimental study focusing on drainage fluid front invasion dynamics through sintered glass beads using a high‐speed camera and rapid capillary pressure measurements to resolve pore scale invasion events over a wide range of boundary conditions (flow rates and gravitational influences). We distinguished three types of “pores”: geometrical pores deduced from image analyses; individual pore invasion volumes imaged during displacement; and pore volumes deduced from capillary pressure fluctuations during constant withdrawal rates. The resulting pore volume distributions were remarkably similar for slow drainage rates. Invaded pore volumes were not affected by gravitational forces, however with increased viscous forces (higher displacement rates) the fraction of small invaded volumes increased. Capillary pressure fluctuations were exponentially distributed in agreement with findings from previous studies. The distribution of pressure fluctuations exhibited a distinct cutoff concurrent with the onset of simultaneous invasion events. The study highlights the different manifestation of “pores” and their sensitivity to external (macroscopic) boundary conditions. The remarkable similarity of geometrical and pressure‐deduced pore spaces offers opportunities for deducing pore size distribution dynamically.

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