40 research outputs found
Pore-scale direct numerical simulation of Haines jumps in a porous media model
Direct numerical simulations are presented for a porous media model
consisting of two immiscible fluids, an invading and defending phase, in a
two-dimensional micro-geometry filled with randomly sized and randomly
distributed cylinders. First, interface instability and penetration modes are
studied when varying the wetting features of a single pore in the porous
medium. It is found that the displacement patterns not only change with the
capillary number, as previously observed, but also are a function of the
contact angle, even for a viscosity ratio of unity. This is an important
conclusion suggesting that capillary number and viscosity ratio alone cannot
completely describe the pore-scale displacement. Second, rapid pore-scale
displacement is considered, where the displacements are accompanied by sudden
interface jumps from one site to another, known as Haines jumps. The
characteristic time and length scales of a Haines jump are examined to better
understand the transient dynamics of the jump. We then focus on analyzing the
Haines jump in a simple pore configuration where cylinders of equal size are
placed at the vertices of equilateral triangles. We use this geometry to
provide more insight into the effect of the contact angle at which the Haines
jump is predicted