A hybrid immersed boundary-lattice Boltzmann/finite difference method for coupled dynamics of fluid flow, advection, diffusion and adsorption in fractured and porous media

ORAL

Abstract

Gas transport coupled with solid-fluid mass transfer is an important mechanism in porous media. Gas adsorption on the solid surface of the pores occurs in many fields of science and engineering. Geoscience applications include CO2 sequestration, energy storage, and especially coal bed methane (CBM) recovery. There exists to date no suitable method for modelling gas adsorption at pore scale level for cases where adsorption/desorption is the dominant mechanism for gas transfer. One important factor for the lack of a suitable computational tool to investigate the kinetics is that the gas adsorption is a multiscale process covering the micro-, meso-, and macroscale. Lattice Boltzmann Method (LBM) as a mesoscopic method has the advantage of offering a bridge between the physics of microscopic and macroscopic scales. This advantage led us to select LBM as a suitable method for the numerical discretization of macroscopic equations. In this paper, a hybrid immersed boundary-lattice Boltzmann/finite difference method is extended to simulate the coupled dynamics of fluid flow, advection, diffusion and adsorption in fractured and porous media.

Presenters

  • Peter Hartmann

    School of Engineering and Information Technology, UNSW Canberra, Australia, School of Minerals and Energy Resources, UNSW Sydney, Australia, University P. Sabatier, Institute of Plasma Physics CAS, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Seikei Univ, Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor, Baylor University, UCSD, Baylor University, Wigner RCP

Authors

  • Peter Hartmann

    School of Engineering and Information Technology, UNSW Canberra, Australia, School of Minerals and Energy Resources, UNSW Sydney, Australia, University P. Sabatier, Institute of Plasma Physics CAS, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Seikei Univ, Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor, Baylor University, UCSD, Baylor University, Wigner RCP

  • Peter Hartmann

    School of Engineering and Information Technology, UNSW Canberra, Australia, School of Minerals and Energy Resources, UNSW Sydney, Australia, University P. Sabatier, Institute of Plasma Physics CAS, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Seikei Univ, Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor, Baylor University, UCSD, Baylor University, Wigner RCP

  • Peter Hartmann

    School of Engineering and Information Technology, UNSW Canberra, Australia, School of Minerals and Energy Resources, UNSW Sydney, Australia, University P. Sabatier, Institute of Plasma Physics CAS, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, Seikei Univ, Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor, Baylor University, UCSD, Baylor University, Wigner RCP