Directional Permeability of Heterogeneous Anisotropic Porous Media

1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (02) ◽  
pp. 124-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.A. Greenkorn ◽  
C.R. Johnson ◽  
L.K. Shallenberger

Abstract This paper describes a study, based on core data, of the directional permeability of a sandstone reservoir. Directional air permeabilities are explained and correlated with lithology by the tensor theory of permeability, which is extended to the more general case of heterogeneous anisotropic porous media. In this case, the permeability tensor is made up of two components:anisotropy (variation around a point) which correlates with bedding, andheterogeneity (variation from point- to-point) which correlates with grain size. Introduction Previous studies of directional permeability, have concerned themselves only with anisotropy at a point, rather than with both point-to-point differences and local anisotropies. In this paper, we present the existing tensor theory of permeability for anisotropic porous media and then extend it to the more general case of heterogeneous anisotropic porous media. The laboratory measurements of directional permeability are explained in view of this extended theory and the data are discussed in terms of the lithologic factors that correlate with it. The results show what the heterogeneity and anisotropy of the reservoir element are, and that the directional permeability correlates with lithology. Data used in this paper are measurements of air permeability in eight directions, spaced at 45 intervals, on 142 2-in. vertical plugs from 30 cores. The core data are meaningful in terms of directional permeability because the cores were oriented to within 45 during drilling and coring. Although we initially thought that only 60 per cent of the core material was reliable, subsequent study showed that almost all of it was reliably oriented. After determining the air permeabilities, the data were reduced to three independent variables for each plug: the major and minor permeability axes, and the direction of the major axis. These were obtained by converting the permeability data to the reciprocal square root of permeability and fitting the transformed data with ellipses according to the tensor theory of permeability. The point-to-point areal variation of the minimum permeability axis is related to grain size. The direction of the permeability axes, where the major axis exceeds the minor axis by at least 5 per cent (measured variation is about 4 per cent), correlates with the bedding. The permeability tensor used in this study must be considered as the sum of a scalar and a tensor, with the scalar being the minor axis permeability as a function of position, and the tensor the directional effect, which is additive permeability over the minor axis. In this case, the point-to-point variation or heterogeneity (minor axis) is substantially larger than the variation at a point or anisotropy. It may be important that this separation of "directional permeabilities" be recognized when considering migration of fluids due to permeability variation. Local migration may be due to anisotropy and point-to-point migration may be due to heterogeneity, but the direction and magnitude of these may not be the same. Furthermore, in truly heterogeneous systems, one would expect that anisotropy would be the smaller of the two effects. THEORY TENSOR THEORY OF PERMEABILITY FOR ANISOTROPIC POROUS MEDIA Darcy's law for flow in porous media in its usual form is where q is the flow rate vector, k is the permeability, mu is the viscosity, V is the vector differential operator, and p is the pressure. SPEJ P. 124ˆ

2012 ◽  
Vol 487 ◽  
pp. 466-470
Author(s):  
Qiu Dong Sun ◽  
Yong Ping Qiu ◽  
Wen Xin Ma ◽  
Wen Ying Yan

The estimation of grain size is the important basis of metallographical analysis. The definitions of grain size, area, average area, chord, major axis, minor axis, diameter and average diameter are given in this article. A filling-and-elimination counting method is also introduced to count the number of grains in the digital steel microscopic image. The equations for calculating average area and diameter of grains are presented too. Finally, an algorithm for calculating grain’s average diameter is given. The experimental results show that the proposed approaches are efficient and practical.


2017 ◽  
Vol 122 (1247) ◽  
pp. 131-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Bajpai ◽  
E. Rathakrishnan

ABSTRACTMach 2 jet from a convergent-divergent elliptical nozzle, of aspect ratio 2, has been controlled with limiting flat and arc tabs. The mixing promoting capability of the flat and arc tabs were studied in the presence of different levels of pressure gradient, at the nozzle exit, corresponding to nozzle pressure ratios of 4 to 8, in steps of one. The geometrical blockage of both the tabs is 5% of nozzle exit area. For the flat tab along the minor axis, the waves in the core become weaker and the core length becomes shorter than the uncontrolled jet, at all the NPRs studied. But the flat tab along the major axis promotes mixing only for some NPRs and retards the mixing for the rest of the NPRs studied. At NPR 5, the flat tab along the minor axis causes the largest core length reduction of 86%. For circular arc tab, along the minor axis, the maximum core length reduction is 55% at NPR 6. Arc tab along the major axis protects the core length for the entire range of the nozzle pressure ratios tested and maximum extension in core length is found at NPR 4, which is 40%.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 3575
Author(s):  
Sung-Woong Choi ◽  
Sung-Ha Kim ◽  
Mei-Xian Li ◽  
Jeong-Hyeon Yang ◽  
Hyeong-Min Yoo

With the rapid development of high-performance fibers such as carbon, enhanced glass fibers in structural applications, the use of fiber-reinforced composite (FRC) materials has also increased in many areas. Liquid composite molding (LCM) is a widely used manufacturing process in composite manufacturing; however, the rapid impregnation of resin in the reinforcing fibers during processing poses a significant issue. The optimization of resin impregnation is related to tow deformations in the reinforcing fibers. The present study therefore focuses on this tow deformation. The permeability behaviors in double-scale porous media were observed under different flow rates and viscosity conditions to examine the overall tendencies of structural changes in the reinforcement. The permeability results showed hysteresis with increasing and decreasing flow rate conditions of 50–800 mm3/s, indicating structural changes in the reinforcement. The tow behaviors of the double-scale porous media with respect to the thickness and flow rate were investigated in terms of the representative indices of the minor axis (tow thickness) and major axis. The minor axis and major axis of the tow showed decreasing and increasing trends of 2–5% and 2%, respectively, with minimum and maximum values at different positions along the reinforcement, affected by the different hydrodynamic entry lengths. Finally, the deformed tow behavior was observed microscopically to examine the behavior of the tow at different flow rates.


Author(s):  
Bhatia Devansh Pradeep ◽  
Imanbir Singh ◽  
Sonam Eden Bhutia

The present experimental study aims at characterizing the mixing characteristics of subsonic elliptic and rectangular orifice jets (Ve = 51 m/s) in the presence of wall of different surface roughness, namely smooth, fine and coarse, placed parallel to the jet axis at the edge of the orifice exit. The wall of length 120 cm of different surface roughness was oriented either parallel to the minor axis plane or major axis plane if the orifice. The wall had a strong effect on the mixing characteristics of elliptic and rectangular jets. The centerline velocity measurement showed that the potential core of elliptic and rectangular orifice jets was around 3De and 3.5De. For both jets, all the wall configurations retarded the mixing of jet with the ambient fluid only in the characteristic decay zone but not in the core and fully developed zones. The level of mixing retardation was found to be maximum when wall was placed parallel to the major axis plane of the jet. The effect of wall on jet mixing was intense for rectangular jet compared to elliptic jet.


2018 ◽  
Vol 855 ◽  
pp. 983-1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuhiko Suga ◽  
Yuki Okazaki ◽  
Unde Ho ◽  
Yusuke Kuwata

Streamwise–wall-normal ( $x$ – $y$ ) and streamwise–spanwise ( $x$ – $z$ ) plane measurements are carried out by planar particle image velocimetry for turbulent channel flows over anisotropic porous media at the bulk Reynolds number $Re_{b}=900{-}13\,600$ . Three kinds of anisotropic porous media are constructed to form the bottom wall of the channel. Their wall permeability tensor is designed to have a larger wall-normal diagonal component (wall-normal permeability) than the other components. Those porous media are constructed to have three mutually orthogonal principal axes and those principal axes are aligned with the Cartesian coordinate axes of the flow geometry. Correspondingly, the permeability tensor of each porous medium is diagonal. With the $x$ – $y$ plane data, it is found that the turbulence level well accords with the order of the streamwise diagonal component of the permeability tensor (streamwise permeability). This confirms that the turbulence strength depends on the streamwise permeability rather than the wall-normal permeability when the permeability tensor is diagonal and the wall-normal permeability is larger than the streamwise permeability. To generally characterize those phenomena including isotropic porous wall cases, modified permeability Reynolds numbers are discussed. From a quadrant analysis, it is found that the contribution from sweeps and ejections to the Reynolds shear stress near the porous media is influenced by the streamwise permeability. In the $x$ – $z$ plane data, although low- and high-speed streaks are also observed near the anisotropic porous walls, large-scale spanwise patterns appear at a larger Reynolds number. It is confirmed that they are due to the transverse waves induced by the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability. By the two-point correlation analyses of the fluctuating velocities, the spacing of the streaks and the wavelengths of the Kelvin–Helmholtz (K–H) waves are discussed. It is then confirmed that the transition point from the quasi-streak structure to the roll-cell-like structure is characterized by the wall-normal distance including the zero-plane displacement of the log-law velocity which can be characterized by the streamwise permeability. It is also confirmed that the normalized wavelengths of the K–H waves over porous media are in a similar range to that of the turbulent mixing layers irrespective of the anisotropy of the porous media.


2012 ◽  
Vol 215-216 ◽  
pp. 1236-1240
Author(s):  
Yao Tian Fan

Design of turning area for sea port is generally done according to the outcome of theoretical calculation or real-ship trial. However, these methods only take into account some limited respects for planning a port or are not so cost-effective. In this paper, computer simulator is used for optimizing the size of turning area for Yangshan LNG terminal. The outcome indicates that the major axis and minor axis of the turning area can meet the requirement of Q-Max LNG carrier berthing operation and it is suggested to do such maneuvering in some given conditions related to wind, current, tide, visibility and wave.


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