605 research outputs found
Local Percolation Probabilities for a Natural Sandstone
Local percolation probabilities are used to characterize the connectivity in
porous and heterogeneous media. Together with local porosity distributions they
allow to predict transport properties \cite{hil91d}. While local porosity
distributions are readily obtained, measurements of the local percolation
probabilities are more difficult and have not been attempted previously. First
measurements of three dimensional local porosity distributions and percolation
probabilities from a pore space reconstruction for a natural sandstone show
that theoretical expectations and experimental results are consistent.Comment: 9 pages, see also http://www.ica1.uni-stuttgart.de , Physica
Local Entropy Characterization of Correlated Random Microstructures
A rigorous connection is established between the local porosity entropy
introduced by Boger et al. (Physica A 187, 55 (1992)) and the configurational
entropy of Andraud et al. (Physica A 207, 208 (1994)). These entropies were
introduced as morphological descriptors derived from local volume fluctuations
in arbitrary correlated microstructures occuring in porous media, composites or
other heterogeneous systems. It is found that the entropy lengths at which the
entropies assume an extremum become identical for high enough resolution of the
underlying configurations. Several examples of porous and heterogeneous media
are given which demonstrate the usefulness and importance of this morphological
local entropy concept.Comment: 15 pages. please contact [email protected] and have a look
at http://www.ica1.uni-stuttgart.de/ . To appear in Physica
Rescaling Relations between Two- and Three-dimensional Local Porosity Distributions for Natural and Artificial Porous Media
Local porosity distributions for a three-dimensional porous medium and local
porosity distributions for a two-dimensional plane-section through the medium
are generally different. However, for homogeneous and isotropic media having
finite correlation-lengths, a good degree of correspondence between the two
sets of local porosity distributions can be obtained by rescaling lengths, and
the mapping associating corresponding distributions can be found from
two-dimensional observations alone. The agreement between associated
distributions is good as long as the linear extent of the measurement cells
involved is somewhat larger than the correlation length, and it improves as the
linear extent increases. A simple application of the central limit theorem
shows that there must be a correspondence in the limit of very large
measurement cells, because the distributions from both sets approach normal
distributions. A normal distribution has two independent parameters: the mean
and the variance. If the sample is large enough, LPDs from both sets will have
the same mean. Therefore corresponding distributions are found by matching
variances of two- and three-dimensional local porosity distributions. The
variance can be independently determined from correlation functions. Equating
variances leads to a scaling relation for lengths in this limit. Three
particular systems are examined in order to show that this scaling behavior
persists at smaller length-scales.Comment: 15 PostScript figures, LaTeX, To be published in Physica
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