The development of microfocused X-ray computed tomography (CT) devices
enables digital imaging analysis at the pore scale. The applications of
these devices are diverse in soil mechanics, geotechnical and
geoenvironmental engineering, petroleum engineering, and agricultural
engineering. In particular, the imaging of the pore space in porous media
has contributed to numerical simulations for single-phase and multiphase
flows or contaminant transport through the pore structure as
three-dimensional image data. These obtained results are affected by the
pore diameter; therefore, it is necessary to verify the image preprocessing
for the image analysis and to validate the pore diameters obtained from the
CT image data. Moreover, it is meaningful to produce the physical parameters
in a representative element volume (REV) and significant to define the
dimension of the REV. This paper describes the underlying method of image
processing and analysis and discusses the physical properties of Toyoura
sand for the verification of the image analysis based on the definition of
the REV. On the basis of the obtained verification results, a pore-diameter
analysis can be conducted and validated by a comparison with the
experimental work and image analysis. The pore diameter is deduced from
Young–Laplace's law and a water retention test for the drainage process.
The results from previous study and perforated-pore diameter originally
proposed in this study, called the voxel-percolation method (VPM), are
compared in this paper. In addition, the limitations of the REV, the
definition of the pore diameter, and the effectiveness of the VPM for an
assessment of the pore diameter are discussed
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