305 research outputs found
Hydraulic conductivity of a dense prehydrated GCL: impact of free swell and swelling pressure
Exposure to liquids with high electrolyte concentrations or high cation valence present in landfill leachates can cause significant increases in hydraulic conductivity of clays due to a reduction in the thickness of the double layer. Methods to prevent compression of the interlayer are: prehydration of the bentonite, compression with increasing the solids content and addition of polymers. The aim of this study is to evaluate the performance of a dense prehydrated GCL (DPH GCL) compressed during manufacturing and pre-hydrated with a polymeric solution. A series of hydraulic conductivity tests with deionised water, sea water and a 0.01 M CaCl 2 solution were performed on single sheet and overlapped DPH GCL samples. Free swell and swelling pressure tests have also been performed with this solutions and with a series of KCI and CaCl 2 solutions with a concentration varying from 0.001 M to 1 M. The overlapped samples were analysed in large scale laboratory permeameters at different effective stresses. In addition, swelling pressure tests on single sheet samples were conducted to analyse the swelling behaviour of the factory prehydrated GCL. The concomitant effect of prehydration, addition of polymeric compounds and densification increased the hydraulic performance of GCLs under aggressive conditions. The use of bentonite paste to seal the overlap in presence of seawater was shown to be crucial. The swelling pressure test may be proposed as an alternative to the swell index test to characterize the swelling behaviour of polymer prehydrated GCLs
A space-time discontinuous Galerkin method for coupled poroelasticity-elasticity problems
This work is concerned with the analysis of a space-time finite element
discontinuous Galerkin method on polytopal meshes (XT-PolydG) for the numerical
discretization of wave propagation in coupled poroelastic-elastic media. The
mathematical model consists of the low-frequency Biot's equations in the
poroelastic medium and the elastodynamics equation for the elastic one. To
realize the coupling, suitable transmission conditions on the interface between
the two domains are (weakly) embedded in the formulation. The proposed PolydG
discretization in space is then coupled with a dG time integration scheme,
resulting in a full space-time dG discretization. We present the stability
analysis for both the continuous and the semidiscrete formulations, and we
derive error estimates for the semidiscrete formulation in a suitable energy
norm. The method is applied to a wide set of numerical test cases to verify the
theoretical bounds. Examples of physical interest are also presented to
investigate the capability of the proposed method in relevant geophysical
scenarios
Numerical modelling of wave propagation phenomena in thermo-poroelastic media via discontinuous Galerkin methods
We present and analyze a high-order discontinuous Galerkin method for the
space discretization of the wave propagation model in thermo-poroelastic media.
The proposed scheme supports general polytopal grids. Stability analysis and
-version error estimates in suitable energy norms are derived for the
semi-discrete problem. The fully-discrete scheme is then obtained based on
employing an implicit Newmark- time integration scheme. A wide set of
numerical simulations is reported, both for the verification of the theoretical
estimates and for examples of physical interest. A comparison with the results
of the poroelastic model is provided too, highlighting the differences between
the predictive capabilities of the two models
Critical issues in the determination of the bentonite cation exchange capacity
The swelling pressure and transport properties of bentonites are controlled by the electric charge density of solid particles, which is commonly estimated from the laboratory measurement of the cation exchange capacity (CEC). However, the standard ammonium displacement method for CEC determination does not take into account the fabric changes that occur in bentonites under exposure to high salt concentration solutions. A series of laboratory tests was conducted to assess the relevance of such a critical issue, by varying the concentration of the extracting KCl solution with respect to that of the standard test. The obtained results show that the release of the adsorbed ammonium cations depends on the bentonite fabric, which is controlled by the KCl concentration. As a consequence, the ammonium displacement method may provide an unrepresentative estimate of the CEC of bentonites. The methylene blue titration method, despite its apparently more limited accuracy, instead seems to provide a more reliable estimation of the CEC, as the bentonite fabric is maintained dispersed during the test
A high-order discontinuous Galerkin method for the poro-elasto-acoustic problem on polygonal and polyhedral grids
The aim of this work is to introduce and analyze a finite element
discontinuous Galerkin method on polygonal meshes for the numerical
discretization of acoustic waves propagation through poroelastic materials.
Wave propagation is modeled by the acoustics equations in the acoustic domain
and the low-frequency Biot's equations in the poroelastic one. The coupling is
introduced by considering (physically consistent) interface conditions, imposed
on the interface between the domains, modeling both open and sealed pores.
Existence and uniqueness is proven for the strong formulation based on
employing the semigroup theory. For the space discretization we introduce and
analyze a high-order discontinuous Galerkin method on polygonal and polyhedral
meshes, which is then coupled with Newmark- time integration schemes. A
stability analysis both for the continuous problem and the semi-discrete one is
presented and error estimates for the energy norm are derived for the
semidiscrete problem. A wide set of numerical results obtained on test cases
with manufactured solutions are presented in order to validate the error
analysis. Examples of physical interest are also presented to test the
capability of the proposed methods in practical cases.Comment: The proof of the well-posedness contains an error. This has an impact
on the whole paper. We need time to fix the issu
High-order Discontinuous Galerkin methods for the elastodynamics equation on polygonal and polyhedral meshes
We propose and analyze a high-order Discontinuous Galerkin Finite Element Method for the approximate solution of wave propagation problems modeled by the elastodynamics equations on computational meshes made by polygonal and polyhedral elements. We analyze the well posedness of the resulting formulation, prove hp-version error a-priori estimates, and present a dispersion analysis, showing that polygonal meshes behave as classical simplicial/quadrilateral grids in terms of dispersion properties. The theoretical estimates are confirmed through various two-dimensional numerical verifications
A hybrid finite volume -- spectral element method for aeroacoustic problems
We propose a hybrid Finite Volume (FV) - Spectral Element Method (SEM) for
modelling aeroacoustic phenomena based on the Lighthill's acoustic analogy.
First the fluid solution is computed employing a FV method. Then, the sound
source term is projected onto the acoustic grid and the inhomogeneous
Lighthill's wave equation is solved employing the SEM. The novel projection
method computes offline the intersections between the acoustic and the fluid
grids in order to preserve the accuracy. The proposed intersection algorithm is
shown to be robust, scalable and able to efficiently compute the geometric
intersection of arbitrary polyhedral elements. We then analyse the properties
of the projection error, showing that if the fluid grid is fine enough we are
able to exploit the accuracy of the acoustic solver and we numerically assess
the obtained theoretical estimates. Finally, we address two relevant
aeroacoustic benchmarks, namely the corotating vortex pair and the noise
induced by a laminar flow around a squared cylinder, to demonstrate in practice
the effectiveness of the projection method when dealing with high order
solvers. The flow computations are performed with OpenFOAM [46], an open-source
finite volume library, while the inhomogeneous Lighthill's wave equation is
solved with SPEED [31], an opensource spectral element library
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