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Resolving Wave Propagation in Anisotropic Poroelastic Media Using Graphical Processing Units (GPUs).

Authors :
Alkhimenkov, Yury
Räss, Ludovic
Khakimova, Lyudmila
Quintal, Beatriz
Podladchikov, Yury
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth; Jul2021, Vol. 126 Issue 7, p1-35, 35p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Biot's equations describe the physics of hydromechanically coupled systems establishing the widely recognized theory of poroelasticity. This theory has a broad range of applications in Earth and biological sciences as well as in engineering. The numerical solution of Biot's equations is challenging because wave propagation and fluid pressure diffusion processes occur simultaneously but feature very different characteristic time scales. Analogous to geophysical data acquisition, high resolution and three dimensional numerical experiments lately redefined state of the art. Tackling high spatial and temporal resolution requires a high‐performance computing approach. We developed a multi‐ graphical processing units (GPU) numerical application to resolve the anisotropic elastodynamic Biot's equations that relies on a conservative numerical scheme to simulate, in a few seconds, wave fields for spatial domains involving more than 1.5 billion grid cells. We present a comprehensive dimensional analysis reducing the number of material parameters needed for the numerical experiments from ten to four. Furthermore, the dimensional analysis emphasizes the key material parameters governing the physics of wave propagation in poroelastic media. We perform a dispersion analysis as function of dimensionless parameters leading to simple and transparent dispersion relations. We then benchmark our numerical solution against an analytical plane wave solution. Finally, we present several numerical modeling experiments, including a three‐dimensional simulation of fluid injection into a poroelastic medium. We provide the Matlab, symbolic Maple, and GPU CUDA C routines to reproduce the main presented results. The high efficiency of our numerical implementation makes it readily usable to investigate three‐dimensional and high‐resolution scenarios of practical applications. Key Points: We present the dimensional analysis of Biot's equationsWe perform three dimensional numerical simulations of poroelastic wave propagationWe propose a multi‐graphical processing units implementation resolving over 1.5 billion grid cells in a few seconds with near ideal parallel efficiency [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21699313
Volume :
126
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research. Solid Earth
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151650743
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JB021175