Abstract

Abstract. The flow of fluids through porous media such as groundwater flow or magma migration is a key process in geological sciences. Flow is controlled by the permeability of the rock; thus, an accurate determination and prediction of its value is of crucial importance. For this reason, permeability has been measured across different scales. As laboratory measurements exhibit a range of limitations, the numerical prediction of permeability at conditions where laboratory experiments struggle has become an important method to complement laboratory approaches. At high resolutions, this prediction becomes computationally very expensive, which makes it crucial to develop methods that maximize accuracy. In recent years, the flow of non-Newtonian fluids through porous media has gained additional importance due to, e.g., the use of nanofluids for enhanced oil recovery. Numerical methods to predict fluid flow in these cases are therefore required. Here, we employ the open-source finite difference solver LaMEM (Lithosphere and Mantle Evolution Model) to numerically predict the permeability of porous media at low Reynolds numbers for both Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids. We employ a stencil rescaling method to better describe the solid–fluid interface. The accuracy of the code is verified by comparing numerical solutions to analytical ones for a set of simplified model setups. Results show that stencil rescaling significantly increases the accuracy at no additional computational cost. Finally, we use our modeling framework to predict the permeability of a Fontainebleau sandstone and demonstrate numerical convergence. Results show very good agreement with experimental estimates as well as with previous studies. We also demonstrate the ability of the code to simulate the flow of power-law fluids through porous media. As in the Newtonian case, results show good agreement with analytical solutions.

Highlights

  • Fluid flow within rocks is of interest for several Earth science disciplines including petrology, hydrogeology and petroleum geoscience, as fluid flow is relevant to the understanding of magma flow, groundwater flow and oil flow, respectively (Manwart et al, 2002)

  • Permeability at crustal scale is of great importance, as crustal scale permeability is a function of its complex microstructure; an accurate prediction of permeability on the pore scale is necessary (Mostaghimi et al, 2013)

  • To demonstrate the capability of the code to compute the flow of non-Newtonian fluids through porous media, we computed the average flow velocity vm for a square subsample of the Fontainebleau sandstone sample described above using the power-law rheology given in Eq (7)

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Summary

Introduction

Fluid flow within rocks is of interest for several Earth science disciplines including petrology, hydrogeology and petroleum geoscience, as fluid flow is relevant to the understanding of magma flow, groundwater flow and oil flow, respectively (Manwart et al, 2002). Eichheimer et al.: Pore-scale permeability prediction for Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids At this point, numerical modeling can help to compute permeabilities and understand the microstructures as well as flow patterns in three-dimensional pore structures. To compute fluid flow directly within 3-D pore structures, it is necessary to determine the morphology of the investigated sample This can be achieved by digital rock physics (DRP). If the suspended particles are much smaller than the system to be modeled, the behavior of these suspensions is commonly described using an effective rheology, exhibiting non-Newtonian behavior in most cases It is not quite clear which physical process is responsible for the non-Newtonian behavior (Deubelbeiss et al, 2011) as the non-Newtonian behavior usually originates from the interaction of suspended particles with each other and the surrounding fluid. The code is verified using analytical solutions and used to perform the permeability computations for a digital Fontainebleau sandstone sample (Andrä et al, 2013b)

Fluid flow in porous media
Method
Comparison with analytical solutions
Newtonian flow through a single vertical tube
Newtonian flow through multiple vertical tubes
Power-law fluid flow through a single vertical tube
Application to Fontainebleau sandstone
Newtonian flow
Power-law fluid flow
Discussion and conclusion
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