Abstract
Dynamics of drainage is analyzed for packings of spheres, using numerical experiments. For this purpose, a dynamic pore-scale model was developed to simulate water flow during drainage. The pore space inside a packing of spheres was extracted using regular triangulation, resulting in an assembly of grain-based tetrahedra. Then, pore units were constructed by identifying and merging tetrahedra that belong to the same pore, resulting in an assembly of pore units. Each pore unit was approximated by a volume-equivalent regular shape (e.g., cube and octahedron), for which a local capillary pressure-saturation relationship was obtained. To simulate unsaturated flow, a pore-scale version of IMPES (implicit pressure solver and explicit saturation update) was employed in order to calculate pressure and saturation distributions as a function of time for the assembly of pore units. To test the dynamic model, it was used on a packing of spheres to reproduce the corresponding measured quasi-static capillary pressure-saturation curve for a sand packing. Calculations were done for a packing of spheres with the same grain size distribution and porosity as the sand. We obtained good agreement, which confirmed the ability of the dynamic code to accurately describe drainage under low flow rates. Simulations of dynamic drainage revealed that drainage occurred in the form of finger-like infiltration of air into the pore space, caused by heterogeneities in the pore structure. During the finger-like infiltration, the pressure difference between air and water was found to be significantly higher than the capillary pressure. Furthermore, we tested the effects of the averaging, boundary conditions, domain size, and viscosity on the dynamic flow behavior. Finally, the dynamic coefficient was determined and compared to experimental data.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 4193-4213 |
Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Water Resources Research |
Volume | 54 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2018 |
Funding
The first author gratefully acknowledges financial support from the Technology Foundation STW, the technological branch of the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research, NWO, and the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs under contract 12538, entitled Interfacial effects in ionized media. The second author thanks European Research Council for supporting this research under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007– 2013)/ERC grant agreement 341225. The third author acknowledges the CRCT granted by Grenoble INP in 2012 which allowed this joint research. All authors gratefully acknowledge the Van Gogh Program 2016 under 35530VM. All data used to support this work are reported in the manuscript in the respective tables and figures or as supporting information. The numerical code is available from www.yade-dem. org. We also acknowledge the valuable comments by Karsten E. Thompson and by two anonymous reviewers.
Keywords
- Discrete Element Method
- dynamic effect
- granular material
- pore scale
- pore-unit assembly
- two-phase flow