Back to Search Start Over

Revisiting poromechanics in the context of microporous materials

Authors :
Bruno Mendiboure
Romain Vermorel
Gilles Pijaudier-Cabot
Christelle Miqueu
Laboratoire des Fluides Complexes et leurs Réservoirs (LFCR)
TOTAL FINA ELF-Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour (UPPA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
TOTAL Tight Gas
Source :
Comptes Rendus Mécanique, Comptes Rendus Mécanique, Elsevier, 2011, 339, pp.770-778. ⟨10.1016/j.crme.2011.09.003⟩
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

International audience; Poromechanics offers a consistent theoretical framework for describing the mechanical response of porous solids, fully or partially saturated with a fluid phase. When dealing with fully saturated microporous materials, which exhibit pores of the nanometre size, aside from the fluid pressure acting on the pore walls additional effects due to adsorption and confinement of the fluid molecules in the smallest pores must be accounted for. From the mechanical point of view, these phenomena result into volumetric deformations of the porous solid: the so-called "swelling" phenomenon. The present work investigates how the poromechanical theory should be refined in order to describe adsorption and confinement induced swelling in microporous solids. Firstly, we report molecular simulation results that show that the pressure and density of the fluid in the smallest pores are responsible for the volumetric deformation of the material. Secondly, poromechanics is revisited in the context of a microporous material with a continuous pore size distribution. Accounting for the thermodynamic equilibrium of the fluid phase in the overall pore space, the new formulation introduces an apparent porosity and an interaction free energy. We use a prototype constitutive relation relating these two quantities to the Gibbs adsorption isotherm, and then calculate the induced deformation of the solid matrix. Agreement with experimental data found in the literature is observed. As an illustrating example, we show the predicted strains in the case of adsorption of methane on activated carbon.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16310721
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Comptes rendus Mxe9canique
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd1e9875a0ac970327cf25c899fa55e1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.crme.2011.09.003