The impact of sub-resolution porosity on numerical simulations of multiphase flow
Sub-resolution porosity (SRP) is a ubiquitous, yet often ignored, feature in Digital Rock Physics. It embodies the trade-off between image resolution and field-of-view, and it is a direct result of choosing an imaging resolution that is larger than the smallest pores in a heterogeneous rock sample....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Advances in water resources 2022-03, Vol.161, p.104094, Article 104094 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Sub-resolution porosity (SRP) is a ubiquitous, yet often ignored, feature in Digital Rock Physics. It embodies the trade-off between image resolution and field-of-view, and it is a direct result of choosing an imaging resolution that is larger than the smallest pores in a heterogeneous rock sample. In this study, we investigate the impacts of SRP on multiphase flow in porous rocks. To do so, we use our newly developed Multiphase Micro-Continuum model to perform first-of-a-kind direct numerical simulations of two-phase flow in porous samples containing SRP. We show that SRP properties (porosity, permeability, wettability) can impact predicted absolute permeabilities, fluid breakthrough times, residual saturations, and relative permeabilities by factors of 2, 1.5, 3, and 20, respectively. In particular, our results reveal that SRP can function as a persistent connector preventing the formation of isolated wetting fluid domains during drainage, thus dramatically increasing relative permeabilities to both fluids at low saturations. Overall, our study confirms previous evidence that flow within the SRP cannot be disregarded without incurring significant errors in numerical predictions or experimental analyses of multiphase flow in heterogeneous porous media.
•Sub-Resolution Porosity (SRP) is an ubiquitous imaging feature in rocks.•Multiphase Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS) are greatly affected by SRP.•Fluid Permeability, breakthrough times, and residual saturations are SRP-dependent.•This is the first time anyone has performed multiphase DNS in rocks with SRP.•We used the multiphase micro-continuum framework to perform our simulations. |
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ISSN: | 0309-1708 1872-9657 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.advwatres.2021.104094 |