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Relative permeability as a stationary process: Energy fluctuations in immiscible displacement

Authors :
Thomas Ramstad
Zhe Li
Ryan Armstrong
Steffen Berg
James McClure
Ming Fan
Carl Fredrik Berg
Source :
Physics of Fluids. 34:092011
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2022.

Abstract

Relative permeability is commonly used to model immiscible fluid flow through porous materials. In this work, we derive the relative permeability relationship from conservation of energy, assuming that the system to be non-ergodic at large length scales and relying on averaging in both space and time to homogenize the behavior. Explicit criteria are obtained to define stationary conditions: (1) there can be no net change for extensive measures of the system state over the time averaging interval; (2) the net energy inputs into the system are zero, meaning that the net rate of work done on the system must balance with the heat removed; and (3) there is no net work performed due to the contribution of internal energy fluctuations. Results are then evaluated based on direct numerical simulation. Dynamic connectivity is observed during steady-state flow, which is quantitatively assessed based the Euler characteristic. We show that even during steady-state flow at low capillary number ([Formula: see text]), typical flow processes will explore multiple connectivity states. The residence time for each connectivity state is captured based on the time-and-space average. The distribution for energy fluctuations is shown to be multi-modal and non-Gaussian when terms are considered independently. However, we demonstrate that their sum is zero. Given an appropriate choice of the thermodynamic driving force, we show that the conventional relative permeability relationship is sufficient to model the energy dissipation in systems with complex pore-scale dynamics that routinely alter the structure of fluid connected pathways.

Details

ISSN :
10897666 and 10706631
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics of Fluids
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c562ff00e53cf01b47997b346fdde678