Flow in Heterogeneous Hele-Shaw Models

1964 ◽  
Vol 4 (04) ◽  
pp. 307-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.A. Greenkorn ◽  
R.E. Haring ◽  
Hans O. Jahns ◽  
L.K. Shallenberger

Abstract This paper is a study of the effects of heterogeneity on flow in an analog of porous media, the Hele-Shaw model. A set of experiments in heterogeneous Hele-Shaw models showed streamlines through and around heterogeneities of various sizes, shapes and levels. (A level, we define as the ratio between the transmissibility of the heterogeneity and that of the rest of the model.) The heterogeneities were restrictions or expansions of the flow stream analogous to variations in the transmissibility of porous media. The experimental data agreed well with numerical results and with an analytical solution, which we derived for a circular heterogeneity in an infinite field. This study considers the flow-stream distortion due to the shape, size and level of heterogeneities. Size and level are much more important than shape provided the heterogeneity is not long and narrow. Our analytical solution shows that a circular heterogeneity in a large field can be replaced by an equivalent circle of either zero or infinite permeability. The radius of the. equivalent circle is a simple function of size and level of the actual circle. Introduction With the availability of high-speed computers and numerical procedures to predict reservoir behavior, we are faced with an important question. How much information about the reservoir do we need to justify the cost of the computer in any given case? To answer this question, we have to know how various reservoir parameters affect flow behavior. Reservoir heterogeneity is one of these parameters. In this study, we used a simple, two-dimensional model of porous media, the Hele-Shaw model, to investigate the effect of heterogeneity on flow behavior. We restricted ourselves to linear, single-phase, steady-state flow in a rectangular field with a single heterogeneity at its center. ANALOGY BETWEEN FLOW IN HELE-SHAW MODELS AND IN POROUS MEDIA HOMOGENEOUS HELE-SHAW MODELS The analogy between flow in Hele-Shaw models and in porous media is easily verified. Let us first consider a homogeneous Hele-Shaw model with constant plate separation h. (The Hele-Shaw model is constructed by placing two plates, usually glass, very close together and allowing liquid to flow between them. Streamlines are made visible by introducing colored fluid into the space between the plates at a number of points across the model.)We assume a cartesian coordinate system with its origin in the middle between the plates and the z axis directed perpendicular to the glass plates (Fig. 1). The fluid flow is always in a direction parallel to the glass plates and varies from a maximum value to zero in the very small distance from the middle (z = 0) to either plate (z = h/2).For slow motion of an incompressible fluid, neglecting inertia and body forces, we have the viscous flow equation: ......................(1) where p is the fluid pressure, mu the viscosity, andthe velocity vector with components u, v and w in the x, y and z directions, respectively. In our case and the derivatives of with respect to x and y are small as compared with the derivative in the z direction. Therefore, approximately, .............(2) with phi p and v being two-dimensional vectors in the x-y plane. SPEJ P. 307ˆ

Water ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heping Shu ◽  
Jinzhu Ma ◽  
Haichao Yu ◽  
Marcel Hürlimann ◽  
Peng Zhang ◽  
...  

Debris flows that involve loess material produce important damage around the world. However, the kinematics of such processes are poorly understood. To better understand these kinematics, we used a flume to measure the kinematics of debris flows with different mixture densities and weights. We used sensors to measure pore fluid pressure and total normal stress. We measured flow patterns, velocities, and depths using a high-speed camera and laser range finder to identify the temporal evolution of the flow behavior and the corresponding peaks. We constructed fitting functions for the relationships between the maximum values of the experimental parameters. The hydrographs of the debris flows could be divided into four phases: increase to a first minor peak, a subsequent smooth increase to a second peak, fluctuation until a third major peak, and a final continuous decrease. The flow depth, velocity, total normal stress, and pore fluid pressure were strongly related to the mixture density and total mixture weight. We defined the corresponding relationships between the flow parameters and mixture kinematics. Linear and exponential relationships described the maximum flow depth and the mixture weight and density, respectively. The flow velocity was linearly related to the weight and density. The pore fluid pressure and total normal stress were linearly related to the weight, but logarithmically related to the density. The regression goodness of fit for all functions was >0.93. Therefore, these functions are accurate and could be used to predict the consequences of loess debris flows. Our results provide an improved understanding of the effects of mixture density and weight on the kinematics of debris flows in loess areas, and can help landscape managers prevent and design improved engineering solutions.


2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Rattanadecho ◽  
S. Wongwises

This paper couples the grid generation algorithm with the heat transport equations and applies them to simulate the thermal behavior of freezing process in water-saturated porous media. Focus is placed on establishing a computationally efficient approach for solving moving boundary heat transfer problem, in two-dimensional structured grids, with specific application to an undirectional solidification problem. Preliminary grids are first generated by an algebraic method, based on a transfinite interpolation method, with subsequent refinement using a partial differential equation (PDE) mapping (parabolic grid generation) method. A preliminary case study indicates successful implementation of the numerical procedure. A two-dimensional solidification model is then validated against available analytical solution and experimental results and subsequently used as a tool for efficient computational prototyping. The results of the problem are in good agreement with available analytical solution and experimental results.


2018 ◽  
Vol 773 ◽  
pp. 225-229
Author(s):  
Jun Sik Lee

Sintered porous media are considered to be one of the best candidates to cool high temperature gas turbine components with blades and vanes for next-generation air cooling. The sintered porous media used in this study is made of the stainless steel SUS316L by metal injection molding process. The complex interaction between fluid and the porous medium causes fluid pressure drop when the fluid is forced to flow through the porous surface. In addition, the information on the relation between porosity and pressure drop of the porous media is important to saving the costs of the filter application and cooling process. This research is intended to understand flow characteristics of the porous media with the air fluid movement according to different porosity and pore size for gas turbine application. The experimental data compared with the calculation are examined for different experimental conditions, which indicate flow behavior of erratic and compressible on the microscopic scale porous media.


1999 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 251-262
Author(s):  
P. Gestoso ◽  
A. J. Muller ◽  
A. E. Saez

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