Lattice Boltzmann modelling of salt precipitation during brine evaporation
•Lattice Boltzmann models for salt precipitation during brine evaporation are established.•The diffusion coefficient of the brine vapour is determined through modelling the Stefan problem.•Different salt precipitation patterns in experiments are reproduced numerically.•The effect of injection rate o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Advances in water resources 2023-10, Vol.180, p.104542, Article 104542 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Lattice Boltzmann models for salt precipitation during brine evaporation are established.•The diffusion coefficient of the brine vapour is determined through modelling the Stefan problem.•Different salt precipitation patterns in experiments are reproduced numerically.•The effect of injection rate on salt precipitation in the microfluidic chip is identified.
Salt precipitation during brine evaporation in porous media is an important phenomenon in a variety of natural and engineering scenarios. This work establishes a multiphase multicomponent lattice Boltzmann (LB) method with phase change for simulating salt precipitation during brine evaporation. In the proposed LB models, the gas–brine multiphase flow, brine evaporation, salt concentration evolution, salt precipitate nucleation and growth are simultaneously considered. Simulations of the Stefan problem are first conducted to verify the proposed numerical models and determine the diffusion coefficient of brine vapour. Once the lattice Boltzmann models have been validated, salt precipitation during brine evaporation is simulated to investigate the competition mechanisms between salt precipitate nucleation and growth reaction. The results show that the typical salt precipitation patterns in existing experimental observation can be successfully reproduced, including the ring-like and pancake-like patterns. The difference in the salt precipitation patterns is explained by the competition mechanism between precipitate growth and nucleation according to the present study. Furthermore, the salt precipitation during gas injection into a microfluidic chip is investigated. The evolution of salt and brine saturation shows similar patterns to existing experimental results, and the effects of the gas injection rate on salt precipitation performance are clarified. The LB models in the present work can simulate salt precipitation with comprehensive consideration of multiphase brine evaporation, salt species mass transport, precipitate nucleation and growth, which have not been realized in previous studies. The numerical showcases demonstrate the excellent performance of the proposed models for the simulation of salt precipitation in porous media, which promise to guide practical engineering applications like CO2 sequestration. |
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ISSN: | 0309-1708 1872-9657 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.advwatres.2023.104542 |