Abstract

Quantitative structure–property relationships are crucial for the understanding and prediction of the physical properties of complex materials. For fluid flow in porous materials, characterizing the geometry of the pore microstructure facilitates prediction of permeability, a key property that has been extensively studied in material science, geophysics and chemical engineering. In this work, we study the predictability of different structural descriptors via both linear regressions and neural networks. A large data set of 30,000 virtual, porous microstructures of different types, including both granular and continuous solid phases, is created for this end. We compute permeabilities of these structures using the lattice Boltzmann method, and characterize the pore space geometry using one-point correlation functions (porosity, specific surface), two-point surface-surface, surface-void, and void-void correlation functions, as well as the geodesic tortuosity as an implicit descriptor. Then, we study the prediction of the permeability using different combinations of these descriptors. We obtain significant improvements of performance when compared to a Kozeny-Carman regression with only lowest-order descriptors (porosity and specific surface). We find that combining all three two-point correlation functions and tortuosity provides the best prediction of permeability, with the void-void correlation function being the most informative individual descriptor. Moreover, the combination of porosity, specific surface, and geodesic tortuosity provides very good predictive performance. This shows that higher-order correlation functions are extremely useful for forming a general model for predicting physical properties of complex materials. Additionally, our results suggest that artificial neural networks are superior to the more conventional regression methods for establishing quantitative structure–property relationships. We make the data and code used publicly available to facilitate further development of permeability prediction methods.

Highlights

  • Background and definitions Geodesic tortuosityWe compute geodesic tortuosity in the flow direction according to Barman et al.[46] in the following manner

  • We find that the information content contained in these two-point correlation functions and geodesic tortuosity are helpful to overcome the difficulty of applying a unique Kozeny-Carman-type equation to a variety of distinct microstructures, by yielding much better prediction performance

  • We have studied data-driven structure–property relationships between fluid permeabilities and a variety of microstructural descriptors in a large data set of 30,000 virtual, porous microstructures of different types

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Summary

Introduction

Background and definitions Geodesic tortuosityWe compute geodesic tortuosity in the flow direction according to Barman et al.[46] in the following manner. We find that the information content contained in these two-point correlation functions and geodesic tortuosity are helpful to overcome the difficulty of applying a unique Kozeny-Carman-type equation to a variety of distinct microstructures, by yielding much better prediction performance.

Results
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