Simulation of Viscous Fingering in Microchannels With Hybrid-Patterned Surface Using Lattice Boltzmann Method

Author(s):  
Margulan Tursynkhan ◽  
Bagdagul Dauyeshova ◽  
Desmond Adair ◽  
Ernesto Monaco ◽  
Luis Rojas-Solórzano

Abstract In recent years, a large effort has been devoted to the study of the viscous fingering phenomenon in microchannel flows. This phenomenon plays a crucial role in many fields of industry and occurs in geological sequestration of carbon dioxide (CO2), in the secondary and tertiary oil recovery stages. Viscous fingering, also known as the Saffman-Taylor instability, occurs at the unstable interface between two fluids when the less viscous fluid displaces the more viscous fluid which is originally residing in a porous medium. This paper studies viscous fingering occurring between two segregated immiscible fluids, such that the less viscous one is forced into a microchannel where the more viscous fluid initially resides. The 2D microchannel walls are present with a hybrid-patterned configuration such that the top wall is smooth, and the bottom wall is ribbed. The multiphase Shan-Chen Lattice Boltzmann Method (SC LBM) is implemented to capture the complex interfacial phenomenon since this method has proven to accurately describe multiphase interfacial entangling. The LBM is based on the discretization of micro- and mesoscopic kinetic equations and the SC LBM simulation allows us to study the viscous fingering phenomenon in terms of non-dimensional quantities, including capillary number and viscosity ratio. The effect of hybrid-patterned rough walls on fingering formation in a 2D microchannel is investigated and compared to the phenomenon when plain smooth walls are in place. The numerical results show that the SC Lattice Boltzmann multicomponent model provides insightful characteristics associated to the physical nature of the fingering phenomenon in microchannels and the role of adjacent walls.

2020 ◽  
Vol 98 (7) ◽  
pp. 650-659
Author(s):  
Peisheng Li ◽  
Chengyu Peng ◽  
Peng Du ◽  
Ying Zhang ◽  
Boheng Dong ◽  
...  

In this paper, the viscous fingering phenomena of two immiscible fluids with a large viscosity ratio was simulated by the Lattice Boltzmann method. The Rothman–Keller Lattice Boltzmann model was applied to study the viscous fingering phenomena in a microchannel where the high viscosity fluids were displaced by low viscosity fluids. We have investigated the influences of parameters such as viscosity ratio (M), surface wettability, capillary number (Ca), and Reynolds number (Re) on finger structures, breakthrough time (Ts), and areal sweep efficiency (Se). In particular, the effects of surface tension and large viscosity ratio on the phenomenon of fluid accumulation were intensively studied. The simulation results showed that the fluid accumulation became more obvious gradually with the increase of M, which led to more serious displacement effects. Moreover, Se increased as the contact angle increased. Besides, as the viscous fingering phenomenon weakened, the phenomenon of fluid accumulation became more evident. Furthermore, the finger pattern had a tendency to increase as the value of Ca and Re increased, and the phenomenon of fluid accumulation decreased with the decrease of Ts and Se.


Author(s):  
Saeed J. Almalowi ◽  
Dennis E. Oztekin ◽  
Alparslan Oztekin

Multi relaxation lattice Boltzmann method is implemented to study Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities. Two immiscible fluids (oil and water) are arrayed into three layers. D2Q9 lattice arrangement for two dimensional computational domains is employed. Density distribution functions for each fluid and distribution functions for the coloring step are determined. The evolution of the interface is identified with the coloring step. Buoyancy and other interaction forces, created by buoyancy, between phases are modeled. Two cases are studied one with periodic boundary condition instead of a side wall, and one bounded on all sides. The study is done with an aspect ratio of two and a density ratio of 1.2. The early and late stages of the instability are characterized. The early stage of both cases shows the initial periodic disturbance being amplified rapidly on the lower interface. The late stages show mushroom-like structures, with significant distortions occurring on the bounded case.


Author(s):  
Amit Gupta ◽  
S. M. Sohel Murshed ◽  
Ranganathan Kumar

In recent years, microfluidic devices that generate micron sized droplets/bubbles have found widespread applications in drug delivery, microanalysis, tumor destruction, as ultrasound agents and in chemical reactions at the micron level. In the current work, simulations results are being presented for a T-junction device for formation of micron-sized droplets using the lattice Boltzmann method. In this work, the key parameters of interest for estimating the frequency and volume of the generated droplets are the flow rates and viscosities of the two fluids, and the geometry of the flow channel. Simulations at low Capillary number indicate that droplets formed occupy the whole volume of the main channel and undergo a squeezing regime. At higher Ca, droplets of size smaller than the width of the channel are formed, and the frequency is dependent on the flow rates of the two liquids. The effect of the width of the dispersed and continuous phase channels is also investigated.


2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (01n02) ◽  
pp. 21-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. INAMURO ◽  
R. TOMITA ◽  
F. OGINO

A lattice Boltzmann method for multicomponent immiscible fluids is applied to simulations of drop deformation and breakup in shear flows for various capillary numbers and viscosity ratios at three different Revnolds numbers, Re = 0.2, 1, 10. The effect of the Reynolds number on drop deformation and breakup in shear flows is investigated. It is found that the drop is easier to deform and to be ruptured as the Reynolds number increases.


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