immiscible flow
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

83
(FIVE YEARS 9)

H-INDEX

16
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-25
Author(s):  
Najrul Haque ◽  
Anugrah Singh ◽  
Ujjwal K. Saha

Abstract The study of fluid flow through fractured porous media has drawn immense interest in the fields of soil hydrology, enhanced oil recovery (EOR) and others. In this work, a low cost fractured micromodel with regular pore geometry is fabricated and visualization experiments are performed to study the flow field produced by single-phase and two-phase immiscible flow. The fractured micromodel is fabricated using Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) substrate. The micro-PIV method is applied to map the flow velocity, both at the throat and near the fracture region of micromodel. In two-phase flow, imbibition flow experiments are performed to investigate the effects of fracture on the front migration caused by the trapping mechanism of residual fluid (displaced phase). The velocity distribution obtained for the two-phase flow revealed many peculiarities that are completely different from the single-phase flow pattern. These peculiarities create instabilities that yield random preferential flow paths near the pockets of stagnant fluid. Such dynamic events are quantified by mapping the velocity magnitude of flow fields. No effects of fracture are seen in the single-phase flow where uniform flow patterns are observed in the porous region. However, for the two-phase flow, more pockets of trapped fluids are found at the junction of two fractures.


Author(s):  
Shailesh Patel

In this paper the phenomenon namely fingering which occurs in the flow problems of oil reservoir engineering has been discussed. The effects arises due to the fingering have been studied by using the Darcy’s law together with different kinds of suitable assumptions and conditions. The problem is then modeled into mathematical form which yields second order partial differential equation. The equation is then solved by using singular perturbation technique together with initial and boundary conditions. The solution is then interpreted in terms of fluid flow terms.


2020 ◽  
Vol 122 ◽  
pp. 103147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anindityo Patmonoaji ◽  
Mushlih Muharrik ◽  
Yingxue Hu ◽  
Chunwei Zhang ◽  
Tetsuya Suekane

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (16) ◽  
pp. 3292
Author(s):  
Lianfu Han ◽  
Yao Cong ◽  
Xingbin Liu ◽  
Changfeng Fu

Flow velocity field measurement is important for analyzing flow characteristics of oil–water two-phase immiscible flow in vertical well. Digital particle image velocimetry (DPIV) is an effective velocity field measurement method that has overcome single point measurement limitation of traditional instruments. However, multiphase flow velocity fields generated by DPIV are often accompanied by local false vectors caused by image mismatching, which leads to measurement results with low accuracy. In this paper, the reasons for oil–water two-phase immiscible flow image mismatching in inner diameter 125 mm vertical pipe is identified by studying the DPIV calculation process. This is mainly caused by image noise and poor window following performance that results from poor deformation performance of the interrogation window. To improve deformation performance of the interrogation window, and thus improve the accuracy of the algorithm, iterative closest point (ICP) and moving least squares (MLS) are introduced into the window deformation iterative multigrid algorithm in DPIV postprocessing algorithm. The simulation showed that the improved DPIV algorithm had good matching performance, and thus the false vector was reduced. The experimental results showed that, in light of the present investigation, on average, the improved DPIV algorithm is found to yield an accuracy improvement of ~6%; the measurement uncertainty and reproducibility of the improved DPIV algorithm were 0.149 × 10−3 m/s and 1.98%, respectively.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document