Forced Imbibition in Stratified Porous Media
ORAL
Abstract
Imbibition plays a central role in diverse energy, environmental, and industrial processes. In many cases, the medium has multiple parallel strata of different permeabilities; however, how this stratification impacts imbibition is poorly understood. We address this gap in knowledge by directly visualizing forced imbibition in three-dimensional (3D) porous media with two parallel strata. We find that imbibition is spatially heterogeneous: for small capillary number Ca, the wetting fluid preferentially invades the fine stratum, while for Ca above a threshold value, the fluid instead preferentially invades the coarse stratum. This threshold value depends on the medium geometry, the fluid properties, and the presence of residual wetting films in the pore space. These findings are well described by a linear stability analysis that incorporates crossflow between the strata. Thus, our work provides quantitative guidelines for predicting and controlling flow in stratified porous media.
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Presenters
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Nancy Lu
Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University
Authors
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Nancy Lu
Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University
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Amir Pahlavan
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University
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Christopher Browne
Princeton University, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University
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Daniel Amchin
Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton University
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Howard A Stone
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton University
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Sujit Datta
Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton University