Fluid Flow Through Porous Media
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fluid mechanics Fluid mechanics is the branch of physics concerned with the mechanics of fluids ( liquids, gases, and plasmas) and the forces on them. It has applications in a wide range of disciplines, including mechanical, aerospace, civil, chemical and ...
, fluid flow through porous media is the manner in which fluids behave when flowing through a
porous medium A porous medium or a porous material is a material containing pores (voids). The skeletal portion of the material is often called the "matrix" or "frame". The pores are typically filled with a fluid ( liquid or gas). The skeletal material is us ...
, for example sponge or wood, or when filtering water using sand or another porous material. As commonly observed, some fluid flows through the media while some mass of the fluid is stored in the pores present in the media. Classical flow mechanics in
porous media A porous medium or a porous material is a material containing pores (voids). The skeletal portion of the material is often called the "matrix" or "frame". The pores are typically filled with a fluid (liquid or gas). The skeletal material is usu ...
assumes that the medium is homogenous, isotropic, and has an intergranular
pore structure Pore structure is a common term employed to characterize the porosity, pore size, pore size distribution, and pore morphology (such as pore shape, surface roughness, and tortuosity of pore channels) of a porous medium. Pores are the openings in th ...
. It also assumes that the fluid is a
Newtonian fluid A Newtonian fluid is a fluid in which the viscous stresses arising from its flow are at every point linearly correlated to the local strain rate — the rate of change of its deformation over time. Stresses are proportional to the rate of chang ...
, that the reservoir is isothermal, that the well is vertical, etc. Traditional flow issues in porous media often involve single-phase steady state flow, multi-well interference, oil-water two-phase flow, natural gas flow, elastic energy driven flow, oil-gas two-phase flow, and gas-water two-phase flow. The physicochemical flow process will involve various physical property changes and
chemical reaction A chemical reaction is a process that leads to the IUPAC nomenclature for organic transformations, chemical transformation of one set of chemical substances to another. Classically, chemical reactions encompass changes that only involve the pos ...
s in contrast to the basic Newtonian fluid in the classical flow theory of porous system.
Viscosity The viscosity of a fluid is a measure of its resistance to deformation at a given rate. For liquids, it corresponds to the informal concept of "thickness": for example, syrup has a higher viscosity than water. Viscosity quantifies the inte ...
, surface tension, phase state, concentration, temperature, and other physical characteristics are examples of these properties. Non-Newtonian fluid flow, mass transfer through
diffusion Diffusion is the net movement of anything (for example, atoms, ions, molecules, energy) generally from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration. Diffusion is driven by a gradient in Gibbs free energy or chemica ...
, and multiphase and multicomponent fluid flow are the primary flow issues.


Governing laws

The movement of a fluid through porous media is described by the combination of
Darcy's law Darcy's law is an equation that describes the flow of a fluid through a porous medium. The law was formulated by Henry Darcy based on results of experiments on the flow of water through beds of sand, forming the basis of hydrogeology, a branch of ...
with the principle of conservation of mass in order to express the capillary force or fluid velocity as a function of various other parameters including the effective pore radius, liquid viscosity or permeability. However, the use of
Darcy's law Darcy's law is an equation that describes the flow of a fluid through a porous medium. The law was formulated by Henry Darcy based on results of experiments on the flow of water through beds of sand, forming the basis of hydrogeology, a branch of ...
alone does not produce accurate results for heterogeneous media like shale, and tight sandstones, where there is a huge proportion of nanopores. This necessitates the use of a flow model that considers the weighted proportion of various flow regimes like Darcy flow, transition flow, slip flow, and free molecular flow.


Darcy's law

The basic law governing the flow of fluids through porous media is
Darcy's Law Darcy's law is an equation that describes the flow of a fluid through a porous medium. The law was formulated by Henry Darcy based on results of experiments on the flow of water through beds of sand, forming the basis of hydrogeology, a branch of ...
, which was formulated by the French civil engineer
Henry Darcy Henry Philibert Gaspard Darcy (, 10 June 1803 – 3 January 1858) was a French engineer who made several important contributions to hydraulics, including Darcy’s law for flow in porous media. Early life Darcy was born in Dijon, France, on J ...
in 1856 on the basis of his experiments on vertical water filtration through sand beds. According to Darcy's law, the fluid's viscosity, effective fluid permeability, and fluid pressure gradient determine the flow rate at any given location in the reservoir. For transient processes in which the flux varies from point to-point, the following differential form of Darcy’s law is used. Darcy's law is valid for situation where the porous material is already saturated with the fluid. For the calculation of capillary imbibition speed of a liquid to an initially dry medium, Washburn's or Bosanquet's equations are used.


Mass conservation

Mass conservation In physics and chemistry, the law of conservation of mass or principle of mass conservation states that for any system closed to all transfers of matter and energy, the mass of the system must remain constant over time, as the system's mass ca ...
of fluid across the porous medium involves the basic principle that mass flux in minus mass flux out equals the increase in amount stored by a medium. This means that total mass of the fluid is always conserved. In mathematical form, considering a time period from t to \Delta t , length of porous medium from x to \Delta x and m being the mass stored by the medium, we have : \rho (x)q(x) - A\rho (x + \Delta x)q(x + \Delta x )Delta t = m(t + \Delta t) - m(t) . Furthermore, we have that m = \rho V_p, where V_p is the pore volume of the medium between x and x+\Delta x and \rho is the density. So m = \rho V_p = \rho \phi V = \rho \phi A\Delta x, where \phi is the
porosity Porosity or void fraction is a measure of the void (i.e. "empty") spaces in a material, and is a fraction of the volume of voids over the total volume, between 0 and 1, or as a percentage between 0% and 100%. Strictly speaking, some tests measur ...
. Dividing both sides by A\Delta x, while \Delta x \rightarrow 0, we have for 1 dimensional linear flow in a porous medium the relation : \frac = \frac ~~~~ (i) In three dimensions, the equation can be written as : \frac + \frac + \frac = \frac The mathematical operation on the left-hand side of this equation is known as the divergence of \rho q, and represents the rate at which fluid diverges from a given region, per unit volume.


Diffusion Equation

Using product rule(and chain rule) on right hand side of the above mass conservation equation (i), : \frac = \rho \frac + \phi \frac = \rho \frac \frac + \phi \frac \frac = \rho \phi \left frac \frac + \frac \frac \right\quad \frac = \rho \phi _\phi + c_ffrac ~~~~ (ii) Here, c_f =
compressibility In thermodynamics and fluid mechanics, the compressibility (also known as the coefficient of compressibility or, if the temperature is held constant, the isothermal compressibility) is a measure of the instantaneous relative volume change of a f ...
of the fluid and c_\phi = compressibility of porous medium. Now considering the left hand side of the mass conservation equation, which is given by
Darcy's Law Darcy's law is an equation that describes the flow of a fluid through a porous medium. The law was formulated by Henry Darcy based on results of experiments on the flow of water through beds of sand, forming the basis of hydrogeology, a branch of ...
as : \frac = \frac \left frac \frac \right\quad = \frac \left rho \frac + \frac \frac \frac \right\quad = \frac \left frac + \left (\frac \frac\right)\left(\frac \right)^2 \right \quad = \frac \left frac + c_f \left(\frac\right)^2 \right\quad ~~~~ (iii) Equating the results obtained in (ii) & (iii), we get : \frac + c_f\left(\frac\right)^2 = \frac \frac The second term on the left side is usually negligible, and we obtain the diffusion equation in 1 dimension as : \frac = \frac \frac where c_t = c_f + c_\phi .


References


Further reading

* * Originally published in 1879, the 6th extended edition appeared first in 1932. * Originally published in 1938. * * * *


External links


Fundamentals of Fluid Flow in Porous Media

Geology Buzz: Porosity

Defining Permeability

Tailoring porous media to control permeability

Permeability of Porous Media


{{Geotechnical engineering, state=collapsed Soil mechanics Hydrology Fluid mechanics