Abstract

In this work, we study the role of viscoelastic instability in the mechanical dispersion of fluid flow through porous media at high Péclet numbers. Using microfluidic experiments and numerical simulations, we show that viscoelastic instability in flow through a hexagonally ordered (staggered) medium strongly enhances dispersion transverse to the mean flow direction with increasing Weissenberg number (Wi). In contrast, preferential flow paths can quench the elastic instability in disordered media, which has two important consequences for transport: first, the lack of chaotic velocity fluctuations reduces transverse dispersion relative to unstable flows. Second, the amplification of flow along preferential paths with increasing Wi causes strongly-correlated stream-wise flow that enhances longitudinal dispersion. Finally, we illustrate how the observed dispersion phenomena can be understood through the lens of Lagrangian stretching manifolds, which act as advective transport barriers and coincide with high stress regions in these viscoelastic porous media flows.

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