SATURATION DEPENDENCE OF TRANSPORT IN POROUS MEDIA PREDICTED BY PERCOLATION AND EFFECTIVE MEDIUM THEORIES

Fractals ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (01) ◽  
pp. 1540004 ◽  
Author(s):  
BEHZAD GHANBARIAN ◽  
ALLEN G. HUNT ◽  
THOMAS E. SKINNER ◽  
ROBERT P. EWING

Accurate prediction of the saturation dependence of different modes of transport in porous media, such as those due to conductivity, air permeability, and diffusion, is of broad interest in engineering and natural resources management. Most current predictions use a "bundle of capillary tubes" concept, which, despite its widespread use, is a severely distorted idealization of natural porous media. In contrast, percolation theory provides a reliable and powerful means to model interconnectivity of disordered networks and porous materials. In this study, we invoke scaling concepts from percolation theory and effective medium theory to predict the saturation dependence of modes of transport — hydraulic and electrical conductivity, air permeability, and gas diffusion — in two disturbed soils. Universal scaling from percolation theory predicts the saturation dependence of air permeability and gas diffusion accurately, even when the percolation threshold for airflow is estimated from the porosity. We also find that the non-universal scaling obtained from the critical path analysis (CPA) of percolation theory can make excellent predictions of hydraulic and electrical conductivity under partially saturated conditions.

2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 1273-1279 ◽  
Author(s):  
LIU-JUAN ZHU ◽  
WEN-ZHONG CAI ◽  
BO-QIN GU ◽  
SHAN-TUNG TU

The nanocomposites consisting of conducting nanoparticles and insulating matrix are studied. A tunneling percolation model is developed for their peculiar conduction behavior based on the equivalent-particle concept. It provides a clear microstructure-property correlation by combining many-particle statistics, effective-medium theory, and classical percolation theory. Its availability is assessed by available experimental data.


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