Experiments on Mixing During Miscible Displacement in Porous Media

1961 ◽  
Vol 1 (01) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
William E. Brigham ◽  
Philip W. Reed ◽  
John N. Dew

Abstract The paper describes experiments on miscible displacement in various porous media and the results of these experiments. Both glass bead packs and natural cores were used. Bead diameters varied from 0.044 to 0.47 mm, and pack lengths varied from 83 to 678 cm. Natural cores used were Berea and Torpedo sandstone. By taking samples as small as 0.5 cc and using refractive index for analysis, the data on break through curves could be plotted to within ± 0.5 per cent. To plot the data correctly on error function paper, a parameter (Vp - v)/vV was used which allowed for the predicted growth of the front as it moved past the observer. The change in the amount of mixing (length of mixed zone) was studied by varying velocity, length of travel, bead size, viscosity ratio and pack diameter. When the displaced material was less viscous than the displacing material (favorable viscosity ratio), these changes were adequately predicted by theory. When natural cores were used, rather than glass beads, the amount of mixing was greatly increased - also qualitatively predicted by theory. In experiments with favorable viscosity ratios in which the ratio was varied from 0. 175 to 0. 998, it was found that the rate of mixing was changed by a factor of 5. 7. Thus, the rate of mixing is strongly affected by viscosity ratio, even when the theoretical error function relationship for mixing is valid. Experiments using fluids with viscosity ratios near 1.0 showed that the instability effects of even a slightly unfavorable viscosity ratio (1.002) caused disproportionately more elongated breakthrough curves than found with a favorable viscosity ratio (.998). When the viscosity ratio was as high as 5.71 these instability effects were much more pronounced, as evidenced by the shape of the breakthrough curve. The displacements at viscosity ratios above 1.0 no longer followed the theoretical error function curve.

1984 ◽  
Vol 24 (01) ◽  
pp. 56-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shapour Vossoughi ◽  
James E. Smith ◽  
Don W. Green ◽  
G. Paul Willhite

Abstract Dispersion and viscous fingering are important parameters in miscible displacement. Effects of dispersion on concentration profiles in porous media can be simulated when the viscosity ratio is favorable. The capability to simulate viscous fingering is limited. This paper presents a new method to simulate effects of viscous fingering on miscible displacement processes in porous media. The method is based on the numerical solution of a general form of the convection-dispersion equation. In this equation the convection term is represented by a fractional flow function. The fractional flow function is derived from Darcy's law by using a concentration-dependent average viscosity and relative flow area to each fluid at any point in the bed. The method was extended to the description of a polymer flood by including retention and inaccessible PV. A Langmuir-type model for polymer retention in the rock was used. The resulting convection-dispersion equation for displacement by polymer was solved numerically by the use of a finite-element method with linear basis functions and Crank-Nicholson derivative approximation. History matches were performed on four sets of laboratory data to verify the model:an unfavorable viscosity ratio displacement,stable displacement of glycerol by polymer solution,unstable displacement of brine by a slug of polymer solution, anda favorable viscosity ratio displacement. In general, computed results from the model matched laboratory data closely. Good agreement of the model with experiments over a significant range of variables lends support to the analysis. Introduction Considerable effort has been directed to the study of dispersion phenomena in flow through porous media. Dispersion phenomena become important in EOR techniques, especially those involving the use of chemical slugs such as a micellar/polymer flood. Because the micellar solution is expensive, a carefully designed polymer buffer solution must be injected between the microemulsion and the drive water. This minimizes the effect of mixing and dispersion that otherwise would cause the micellar slug to lose its effectiveness. Aronofsky and Heller1 were among the first to use the diffusion or dispersion model to describe miscible displacement. This employs Fick's law of diffusion to describe the transport of mass within the zone containing both displacing and displaced fluids. The so-called convection-dispersion equation obtained by differential material balance has become generally accepted as the basis for analysis of miscible displacements. The dispersion equation has been solved numerically2–6 as well as analytically6,7 to obtain concentration profiles and dispersion coefficients. However, the prediction fails whenever viscous fingering occurs. Viscous fingering is the result of an unstable displacement of a more viscous fluid by a less viscous fluid. Finger-shaped intrusions of the displacing fluid into the displaced fluid have been observed and reported in the literature8–11 for miscible as well as immiscible displacements.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ankur Bordoloi ◽  
David Scheidweiler ◽  
Pietro de Anna

<p>Heterogeneity in porous media may occur due to non-uniformity in the sizes or the shapes of grains that comprise the medium. We investigate the transport of colloids in a heterogeneous porous medium engineered in microuidic channels and featuring complex grain structures. Using experiment and numerical simulation, we investigate the velocity fields and the breakthrough curves of colloidal transport in a model porous medium by emphasising on the effects of dead-end pores. We characterize the porous structure via image processing and isolate dead-end sites from the remaining pore spaces. The study reveals complex flow structures inside dead-end sites that contribute to the small-scale velocity and long tails in the breakthrough curve. We provide a statistical model to capture the complex dynamics of the breakthrough curve.</p>


1963 ◽  
Vol 3 (02) ◽  
pp. 155-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.L. Dougherty

DOUGHERTY, E.L., CALIFORNIA RESEARCH CORP., LA HABRA, CALIF. JUNIOR MEMBER AIME Abstract A phenomenological theory for a one-dimensional unstable miscible displacement similar in type to the Buckley-Leverett model but including the effects of mixing is proposed An equation giving the fractional flow of pure solvent through an oil phase containing dissolved solvent is derived including the effects of gravity and nonhomogeneities. Numerical integration of the resulting pair of nonlinear hyperbolic partial differential equations gives volumes of dissolved and undissolved solvent as functions of space and time. Parameters in the model which characterize mixing due to dispersion were determined from experimental data; the parameters correlated with viscosity ratio. The results indicate that the rate of dispersive mixing is proportional to volumetric flow rate Incorporated into our equations were Koval's heterogeneity factor H, which characterizes mixing due to channeling. This allowed satisfactory predictions of displacement behavior observed in horizontal floods in nonhomogeneous cores; but in most cases the values of H which we used were considerably larger than those used by Koval. Introduction It has been shown that for favorable viscosity ratios, the diffusion equation with convection satisfactorily describes the behavior of a miscible displacement in a porous media. Numerous attempts to develop a satisfactory mathematical description for the case of unfavorable viscosity ratio have been reported, but they have met with only partial success. These attempts, which are reviewed by Koval, have taken two approaches:development of a flow model akin to the Buckley-Leverett approach for immiscible displacement neglecting the effects of mixing andsimultaneous application of Darcy's Law for flow and the diffusion equation with a convection term for mass transfer. We set out to construct a mathematical model of Type 1 including, though, the effects of mixing. Based upon a set of hypotheses, we derived a pair of non-linear hyperbolic partial differential equations which describe in a one-dimensional system the combined effects of flow and mixing. To work with these equations it was necessary to develop a fractional flow formula. The combined system was integrated numerically using the method of characteristics.In our equations the mixing process is characterized by four parameters. Three of these, labeled beta, p and p, account for dispersive type mixing. The fourth is the heterogeneity factor H, proposed by Koval to account for channeling due to nonhomogeneities in the porous media. Values of the parameters which would cause agreement between theory and experiment were determined by trial-and-error for miscible floods conducted in horizontal cores of both homogeneous and heterogeneous materials. Calculations were also performed for vertical floods in homogeneous cores.The purpose of this paper isto present the details of the mathematical analysis,to present the results of the calculations,to consider what light the results shed on the mixing process in an unstable miscible displacement, andto provide a firmer foundation for the correlation technique developed by Koval for predicting the behavior of unstable miscible floods. STATEMENT OF PROBLEM The problem is to construct a mathematical model which describes in one dimension the observed behavior in an unstable miscible displacement. The approach is phenomenological in that the equations are based on assumptions which violate certain physical precepts known to apply to the displacement phenomenon. However, the assumptions do allow us to account mathematically for the more essential phenomena. The work is of value if we can quantitatively predict experimental results which heretofore could not be predicted, even though the synthetic nature of the model belies complete explanation of the observations.We assume that the system is comprised of two contiguous flowing phases. One phase, which we call free solvent, has the properties of pure solvent. We call the fraction of the pore volume occupied by this phase the solvent saturation, designated s. SPEJ P. 155^


Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 2474 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianxian Chu ◽  
Tiantian Li ◽  
Zhen Li ◽  
An Yan ◽  
Chongyang Shen

This study used polystyrene latex colloids as model microplastic particles (MPs) and systematically investigated their retention and transport in glass bead-packed columns. Different pore volumes (PVs) of MP influent suspension were first injected into the columns at different ionic strengths (ISs). The breakthrough curves (BTCs) were obtained by measuring the MP concentrations of the effluents. Column dissection was then implemented to obtain retention profiles (RPs) of the MPs by measuring the concentration of attached MPs at different column depths. The results showed that the variation in the concentrations of retained MPs with depth changed from monotonic to non-monotonic with the increase in the PV of the injected influent suspension and solution IS. The non-monotonic retention was attributed to blocking of MPs and transfer of these colloids among collectors in the down-gradient direction. The BTCs were well simulated by the convection-diffusion equation including two types of first-order kinetic deposition (i.e., reversible and irreversible attachment). However, this model could not well simulate the non-monotonic retention profiles due to the fact that the transfer of colloids among collectors was not considered. The results in this study are critical to developing models to simulate the fate and transport of MPs in porous media such as soil.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandru Tatomir ◽  
Huhao Gao ◽  
Hiwa Abdullah ◽  
Martin Sauter

<p>Fluid-fluid interfacial area (IFA) in a two-phase flow in porous media is an important parameter for many geoscientific applications involving mass- and energy-transfer processes between the fluid-phases. Schaffer et al. (2013) introduced a new category of reactive tracers termed kinetically interface sensitive (KIS) tracers, able to quantify the size of the fluid-fluid IFA. In our previous experiments (Tatomir et al., 2018) we have demonstrated the application of the KIS tracers in a highly-controlled column experiment filled with a well-characterized porous medium consisting of well-sorted, spherical glass beads.</p><p>In this work we investigate several types of glass-bead materials and natural sands to quantitatively characterize the influence of the porous-medium grain-, pore-size and texture on the mobile interfacial area between an organic liquid and water. The fluid-fluid interfacial area is determined by interpretation of the breakthrough curves (BTCs) of the reaction product of the KIS tracer. When the tracer which is dissolved in the non-wetting phase meets the water, an irreversible hydrolysis process begins leading to the formation of two water-soluble products. For the experiments we use a peristaltic pump and a high precision injection pump to control the injection rate of the organic liquid and tracer.</p><p>A Darcy-scale numerical model is used to simulate the immiscible displacement process coupled with the reactive tracer transport across the fluid-fluid interface. The results show that the current reactive transport model is not always capable to reproduce the breakthrough curves of tracer experiments and that a new theoretical framework may be required.</p><p>Investigations of the role of solid surface area of the grains show that the grain surface roughness has an important influence on the IFA. . Furthermore, a linear relationship between the mobile capillary associated IFA and the inverse mean grain diameter can be established. The results are compared with the data collected from literature measured with high resolution microtomography and partitioning tracer methods. The capillary associated IFA values are consistently smaller because KIS tracers measure the mobile part of the interface. Through this study the applicability range of the KIS tracers is considerably expanded and the confidence in the robustness of the method is improved.</p><p> </p><p> </p><p>Schaffer M, Maier F, Licha T, Sauter M (2013) A new generation of tracers for the characterization of interfacial areas during supercritical carbon dioxide injections into deep saline aquifers: Kinetic interface-sensitive tracers (KIS tracer). International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control 14:200–208. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijggc.2013.01.020</p><p>Tatomir A, Vriendt KD, Zhou D, et al (2018) Kinetic Interface Sensitive Tracers: Experimental Validation in a Two-Phase Flow Column Experiment. A Proof of Concept. Water Resources Research 54:10,223-10,241. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018WR022621</p>


Catalysts ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iván Santamaría-Holek ◽  
Saúl Hernández ◽  
Consuelo García-Alcántara ◽  
Aldo Ledesma-Durán

We review and generalize a recent theoretical framework that provides a sound physicochemical basis to describe how volume and surface diffusion are affected by adsorption and desorption processes, as well as by catalytic conversion within the space defined by the irregular geometry of the pores in a material. The theory is based on two single-dimensional mass conservation equations for irregular domains deduced for the volumetric (bulk) and surface mass concentrations. It offers a powerful tool for analyzing and modeling mass transport across porous media like zeolites or artificially build materials, since it establishes how the microscopic quantities that refer to the internal details of the geometry, the flow and the interactions within the irregular pore can be translated into macroscopic variables that are currently measured in experiments. The use of the theory in mass uptake experiments is explained in terms of breakthrough curves and effective mass diffusion coefficients which are explicitly related to the internal geometry of the pores.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document