Oct 3, 2011 - Holtzman and Juanes, 2010; Chevalier et al., 2009; Johnsen et al.,. 73. 2006; Varas et al., ...... C. R. Mecanique 331, 835â. 410. 842. 411. 19 ...
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Biphasic flow: structure, upscaling, and
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consequences for macroscopic transport properties
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R. Toussaint (1), K.J. M˚ aløy (2), Y. M´eheust (3), G. Løvoll (2, 4), M. Jankov (2), G. Sch¨afer (4), J. Schmittbuhl (1) (1) IPGS, CNRS, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg (France) (2) Physics Department, University of Oslo, Oslo (Norway) (3) G´eosciences Rennes, University of Rennes 1, Rennes (France) (4) Det Norske Veritas AS, Research and Innovation, Høvik (Norway) (5) LHYGES, CNRS, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg (France)
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October 3, 2011
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Abstract
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In disordered porous media, biphasic immiscible fluid flows orga-
7
nize in patterns that sometimes exhibit fractal geometries over a range
8
of length scales, depending on the capillary, gravitational and viscous
9
forces at play. These forces, as well as the boundary conditions, also
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determine whether the flow leads to the appearance of fingering path-
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ways, i.e., unstable flow, or not. We present here a short review of
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these aspects, summarizing when these flows are expected to be stable
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or not, what fractal dimensions can be expected, and in which scale
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ranges. We base our review on experimental studies performed in two-
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dimensional Hele-Shaw cells, or addressing three dimensional porous
16
media by use of several imaging techniques. We first present configu-
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rations in which solely capillary forces and gravity play a role. Next,
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we review configurations in which capillarity and viscosity are the main
1
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forces at play. Eventually, we examine how this microscopic geome-
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try affects the macroscopic transport properties: its fractal structure
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and the way in which the scale range depends on the flux have for
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instance an impact on the relationship between saturation and the
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pressure difference between the two phases, at the macroscopic scale.
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An example of such an upscaling is illustrated in details.
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1
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The physics of two phase flows in porous media is a complex and
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rich topic, with obvious applications to the hydraulics of the vadoze
28
zone, be it water infiltration, its evaporation, or the transport of Dense
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Non-aqueous Phase Liquids (DNAPL) down to the aquifers (Dridi,
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2009). Hydrogeologists and soil scientists aim at relating volumetric
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flow, pressure head, and water content at the Darcy scale, that is,
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a meso-scale above which the medium and the flow are described by
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continuous mathematical fields. The basic laws of multiphase flows
34
treated at mesoscopic scale as a continuum require a closure of partial-
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flow Darcy relations. The key point of this closure is a functional
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relation between the capillary pressure (in a water-air system) and
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(water) saturation in the form of retention curves.
Introduction
38
The physics community has been mostly concerned with character-
39
izing and understanding flow structures/patterns from the pore scale
40
and up. These structures and processes have a ajor impact on the
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retention curves. Notably, viscous fingering may have strong influence
42
on retention curves resulting in dynamic saturationpressure curves in
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porous media.
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These flow structures can vary from the compact to the ramified
45
and fractal (Lenormand , 1989; Lenormand et al. , 1989; M˚ aløy et al.,
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1985; M´eheust et al., 2002; Sandnes et al., 2011; Holtzman and Juanes,
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2010). One major issue is to simplify this complexity by keeping just
48
enough information to describe the relevant physics at the relevant
2
49
scale for the flow considered, without discarding important informa-
50
tion. The porous body of a piece of soil or rock consists of pores and
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fracture networks of different length scales and shapes, whose perme-
52
ability is often anisotropic and presents large spatial variations (see e.g.
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Zimmerman and Bodvarsson (1996); M´eheust and Schmittbuhl (2000,
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2001); Neuville et al. (2010a,b); Neuville et al. (2011a); Neuville et al.
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(2011b,c)). In general the soil/rock is a dynamic medium where the
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porosity can be modified by the fluids involved due to chemical reac-
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tions and desorption/adsorption mechanisms, in addition to the fluid
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pressure and the mechanical stress acting on the porous medium. The
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chemical composition and nano/micro structure of the rock further
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decides the wetting properties of the fluids which is crucial for the cap-
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illary front advancement in two-phase flow. For example, when a fluid
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with high viscosity is displaced in a porous medium by a fluid with a
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lower viscosity, the displacing fluid tends to channel through the paths
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of lower flow resistance, thereby forming pronounced fingers. The in-
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fluence of the physical properties of the fluids plays important practical
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role on natural flows: e.g., in soil and groundwaters, the identification
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of pollution sources is difficult due to the fact that organic pollutants
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can rapidly migrate down to the bottom of the aquifer and/or along
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paths different from the water (Benremita et al., 2003).
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In addition, when the porous medium is deformable, branching
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structures can be observed with transitions to fracturing of the porous
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medium (Lemaire et al., 1993; Cheng et al., 2008; Sandnes et al., 2011;
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Holtzman and Juanes, 2010; Chevalier et al., 2009; Johnsen et al.,
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2006; Varas et al., 2011) or formation of fingers, channels or bubbles
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in it (Johnsen et al., 2007, 2008; Kong et al., 2011; Vinningland et al.,
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2007a,b, 2010, 2011; Niebling et al., 2010a,b).
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In this review we will address the detailed structure and dynam-
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ics of two phase flow in fixed and disordered porous media, based on
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pore scale experiments. We will limit the discussion to drainage, i.e.
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to situations where a non wetting fluid displaces a wetting one – even
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though imbibition, where a wetting fluid invades a non wetting one, is
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of equal practical importance. The discussion will be limited to me-
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dia that are isotropic and homogeneous at large scales, and to cases
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where chemical reactions and adsorption or desorption between the
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fluids and the porous medium can be neglected. The structures of
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clusters of moving fluid and the dynamics of drainage in porous media
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depend on several parameters like the density difference, the surface
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tension, the wetting properties, the viscosities and the flow rates of the
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fluids involved. These different parameters correspond to forces. The
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forces that dominate on different length scales and their interplay give
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rise to separate scaling regimes. Up-scaling, which consists in relating
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the pore scale description to properties defined at the Darcy scale or
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even at the macroscopic scale, is a central topic within hydrology and
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oil recovery. Only by understanding the scaling of the structures and
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dynamics within each regime, and what controls the crossover lengths
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involved, is it possible to perform up-scaling. The structures involved
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are typically fractal within some scaling range; their fractal dimension
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depends on length scales, and often result from fluctuations occur-
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ring at smaller scales. At the end of this short review we provide an
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example of upscaling of recent experimental data; the experiments in
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question were aimed at studying the crossover between capillary and
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viscous fingering in a quasi two-dimensional porous medium.
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104
2
Capillary and gravitational effects
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When drainage is performed in the limit of infinitely slow displacement
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velocities, the pressure drop accross the porous medium is controlled
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by the capillary pressure drop accross the interface between the two
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fluids. The criterium for advancement of the interface into a given pore
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is that the capillary pressure drop be larger than the capillary pressure
4
110
threshold needed to invade the pore neck that separates that pore from
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the already-invaded adjacent pore. The value of the capillary pressure
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threshold fluctuates from pore neck to pore neck, with a distribution
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function determined by the geometry of the porous medium. In the
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case of zero gravity or for a horizontal 2D porous medium, the next
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pore throat/neck to be invaded will be, among the pores that touch
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the interface, the one whose pore throat has the smallest capillary
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pressure threshold. This idea is the basis of the invasion percolation
118
algorithm (de Gennes and Guyon, 1978; Chandler et al., 1982; Wilkin-
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son and Willemsen, 1983), where random numbers representing the
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capillary pressure threshold values are distributed on a lattice and
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where the front is moved at each time step at the location along the
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interface corresponding to the smallest threshold value. The fact that
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the fluid front always moves at the most easily invaded pore neck and
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nowhere else is actually not always true in real flows, even if it is a
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good approximation. What drives the advancement of the front is the
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capillary pressure build-up in the fluid. The capillary pressure will not
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relax immediately after invasion of a new pore but is controlled by a
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back contraction of the fluid interface. This is the reason for the so
129
called Haines jumps which may lead to invasion of several pores in one
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jump (Haines, 1930; Furuberg et al., 1996; M˚ aløy et al., 1985)
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When the displaced fluid is incompressible (or lowly compressible),
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trapping takes place. Trapping is very important in two dimensions
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(2D) (Wilkinson and Willemsen, 1983) but much less significant in
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three dimensions (3D). Experiments addressing this so-called capil-
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lary fingering in 2D model systems were first performed by Lenormand
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(1989)who found a fractal dimension of the invaded structures equal
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to D = 1.83, in consistency with the results of numerical simulations
138
based on invasion percolation with trapping (Wilkinson and Willem-
139
sen, 1983). In 3D, several experiments have been performed (Chuoke et
140
al., 1959; Paterson et al., 1984a,b; Chen et al., 1992; Hou et al., 2009;
5
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Mandava et al., 1990; Nsir et al., 2011; Jianzhao et al., 2011). The
142
fractal dimension found at small scale, between 2 and 2.6 is compat-
143
ible with the dimension D = 2.5 found in three dimensional invasion
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percolation models (Wilkinson and Willemsen, 1983).
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Even though the capillary fingering structure is fractal, in practice
146
it is well described by a fractal dimension only within a window of
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length scales ranging from the pore size up to a crossover length on
148
a larger scale. In the case where the density difference between the
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two fluids is different from zero, but where viscous forces are small
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compared to the others, this crossover length corresponds to a scale at
151
which the capillary threshold fluctuations become of the same order of
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magnitude as the difference in hydrostatic pressure drop between the
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two fluids. This means that the crossover will always occur when the
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fluid structures become large enough. When a lighter fluid is displacing
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a heavier one from above at a slow flow rate resulting in low viscous
156
forces, a stable displacement is observed , that is, the displacing fluid
157
does not finger its way trough the displaced fluid; the crossover length
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sets the width of the rough interface between the two fluids (Birovljev
159
et al., 1991; M´eheust et al., 2002; Løvoll et al., 2005), parallel to the
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average flow direction. Gravitational effects can easily be accounted for in the invasion percolation model by mapping the system onto a problem where the capillary threshold values are modified linearly by the hydrostatic pressure difference between the two fluids (Wilkinson, 1984; Birovljev et al., 1991; Auradou et al., 1999). By using this theory of percolation in a gradient , Wilkinson (1984) predicted theoretically the scaling of the front width ξ observed in a gravitational field as −ν
ξ/a ∝ B0ν+1 ,
(1)
161
where the Bond number B0 = ∆ρga2 /γ is the ratio of the difference
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of the hydrostatic pressure drops in the two fluids on the length scale
6
163
of a single pore to the capillary pressure drop. Here, ∆ρ is the density
164
difference between the fluids, g the gravitational acceleration, a the
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characteristic pore size and γ the surface tension between the two flu-
166
ids. Gravitationally-stabilized fluid fronts occurring during very slow
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two-dimensional drainage have been studied both experimentally and
168
by computer simulations (Birovljev et al., 1991). The results were
169
found consistent with the theoretical prediction of Wilkinson (1984).
170
When a lighter fluid is injected into a heavier fluid from below (Frette
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et al., 1992; Birovljev et al., 1995; Wagner et al., 1997), gravitational
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fingering of the displacing fluid through the displaced fluid occurs; a
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scaling behavior consistent with Eq. (1) has has also been found in
174
this unstable case: the characteristic length scale ξ then corresponds
175
to the width of the unstable gravitational fingers, perpendicularly to
176
the average flow direction. The same simple mapping to invasion per-
177
colation as described above can also be performed in the case of slow
178
displacement in a rough fracture joint filled with particles (Auradou et
179
al., 1999).
180
When comparing systems with different capillary pressure threshold
181
distributions, Eq.(1) needs to be modified. From the phenomenology of
182
the invasion process that we have explained above, it is quite intuitive
183
that a gravity-stabilized front in a porous medium presenting a narrow
184
capillary noise (i.e. a narrow distribution of the capillary thresholds)
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will give a flatter front than a porous medium with a wide capillary
186
noise. Instead of equation Eq. (1), it has therefore been suggested to
187
take into account a dimensionless fluctuation number F = ∆ρga/Wt ,
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in which capillary fluctuations are accounted for in terms of the width
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Wt of the capillary pressure distribution (Auradou et al., 1999; M´eheust
190
et al., 2002). Experiments to check the dependence of the displace-
191
ment process on the capillary noise are difficult, because controlling
192
the capillary noise in a systematic way is not straightforward. These
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experiments therefore remain to be done.
7
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3
Capillary and viscous effects
The crossover between capillary fingering and regimes for which viscous effects are dominant was first studied in the pioneering work of Lenormand (1989). He classified the different flow structures in a phase diagram depending on the viscosity contrast M = µi /µd between the fluids and the capillary number Ca = ∆Pvisc /∆Pcap , which is the ratio of the characteristic viscous pressure drop at the pore scale to the capillary pressure drop. Here µi and µd are the viscosities of the injected and displaced fluid, respectively. From the Darcy equation, the capillary number can be evaluated as
Ca =
∆Pvisc µa2 v a∇Pvisc = . = ∆Pcap γ/a κγ
(2)
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where γ is the surface tension, a the characteristic pore size, κ the in-
196
trinsic permeability of the medium, v the seepage velocity associated to
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the imposed flow rate of the displaced fluid, µ the viscosity of the most
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viscous fluid, and γ/a the typical capillary pressure drop accross the
199
interface. Lenormand identified three flow regimes: (i) stable displace-
200
ment, for which the interface roughness is not larger than one linear
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pore size, (ii) capillary fingering, which we have discussed in section 2,
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and (iii) viscous fingering, which occurs when large scale fingers of the
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displacing fluid develop inside a more viscous defending fluid, resulting
204
in a much faster breakthrough of the displacing fluid. It is important
205
to keep in mind that the observed structures will depend on the length
206
scale considered. For large systems it is therefore not meaningful to
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talk about a sharp transition in a phase diagram between capillary
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and viscous fingering, because one will always have both structures
209
present, i.e. capillary fingering on small length scales, and either vis-
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cous fingering or stable displacement on large length scales. When the
211
two fluids involved have different viscosities, the viscous pressure drop
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between two points along the fluid interface will typically be differ-
8
213
ent in the two fluids. This viscosity contrast will produce a change
214
in the capillary pressure along the fluid interface, therefore playing a
215
role similar to that of density contrasts in the presence of a grav-
216
itational field (see section 2). At sufficiently large length scales, the
217
difference in viscous pressure drop between the two sides of the in-
218
terface will become larger than the typical fluctuations in capillary
219
pressure threshold. This means that at sufficiently large length scales,
220
and thus for a sufficient large system , viscous pressure drops , rather
221
than capillary forces associated to random capillary thresholds, de-
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termine the most likely invaded pores; consequently, viscous fingering
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will always dominate at sufficiently large scales when a viscous fluid
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is injected into another more viscous fluid. At these large scales, and
225
in the absence of a stabilizing gravitational effects, two-dimensional
226
flows exhibit tree-like branched displacement structures with a fractal
227
dimension Dv = 1.6 (M˚ aløy et al., 1985). M´eheust et al. (2002) have introduced an generalized fluctuation number F =
∆ρga − Wt
aµv κ
(3)
which is the ratio of the typical total pressure drop in the fluids over one pore , including both viscous and gravitational pressure drops, to the width of the capillary pressure threshold distribution Wt . The experiments by M´eheust et al. (2002), identical to those by Birovljev et al. (1991) but performed at larger flow rates and therefore under significant viscous effects, showed that the characteristic width of the rough interface parallel to the macroscopic flow could be characterized with the fluctuation number according to an equation analog to Eq.(1): −ν
ξ/a ∝ F ν+1
(4)
228
where the exponent ν/(1 + ν) = 4/7 is consistent with percolation the-
229
ory (ν = 4/3) in 2D. Since the viscous pressure field is not homogeneous
9
230
like the gravitational field, this result is not obvious. Note that in this
231
case ξ can be interpreted as the length scale at which the sum of the
232
viscous and gravitational pressure drop becomes of the same order of
233
magnitude as the spatial fluctuations of the capillary pressure thresh-
234
old. In terms of fluid-fluid interface, ξ corresponds to the crossover
235
scale between capillary fingering structures at small scale and the sta-
236
bilized structure, which is linear (dimension 1) at large scales. When
237
the displacement is large enough for viscous forces to play a role, the
238
fractal dimension typical of viscous fingering structures is also seen at
239
intermediate scales (M´eheust et al., 2002). Even in the case where the
240
two fluids involved have the same viscosity, the width of the front was
241
found to be consistent with Eq.(4) (Frette et al., 1992). As observed in
242
the experiments of Frette et al. (1992) the effect of trapping turns out,
243
at least in two dimensions, to be of central importance. The trapped
244
islands result in a decrease in the relative permeability of the invaded
245
fluid, which is equivalent to having a fluid with a higher viscosity. This
246
is the effect responsible for the well-known decreasing dependence of
247
a soil’s matric potential on its water content. This result is consistent
248
with the scaling relation Eq.(4), which is expected from theoretical
249
arguments for percolation in a stabilizing gradient (Xu et al., 1998;
250
Wilkinson, 1984; Lenormand , 1989). Note thate other scaling rela-
251
tions have been derived theoretically and observed experimentally by
252
other authors, as reported by Xu et al. (1998). As mentioned previously, when a viscous fluid is injected into a 2D medium filled with a more viscous fluid, viscous fingers occur. The scaling of the finger width was studied experimentally by Løvoll et al. (2004) and Toussaint et al. (2005). The measurements were found to be consistent with a scaling law in the form ξ/a ∝ Ca−1
253
(5)
This result is different from the scaling laws that can be explained
10
254
from the theory of percolation in a gradient, as observed with stabi-
255
lizing viscous forces.
256
Toussaint et al. (2005), the destabilizing field is highly inhomogeneous
257
and screened around the fingers, which may explain why the behaviour
258
expected from percolation in a gradient is not observed, but a rather
259
simpler one instead. Note however that scaling laws based on the the-
260
ory of percolation in a gradient are still expected for some types of
261
unstables flows (Xu et al., 1998).
In the experiments of Løvoll et al. (2004) and
262
The scaling law (5) can be explained from a simple mean field ar-
263
gument: consider an approximation for the pressure field for which
264
the pressure gradient is homogeneous around the mobile sites at the
265
boundary between the two fluids; the pressure difference between two
266
points at a distance l is l∇P ∼ lCaγ/a2 . This relation holds not only
267
when the viscosity of one fluid can be neglected with respect to that
268
of the other one (for example, for air and water), in which case the
269
definition of the capillary number if given by Eq. (2); it also holds in
270
the general case of two viscous fluids, in which the capillary number
271
can be defined from Eq. (2) by replacing the viscous pressure drop by
272
a the difference in viscous pressure drop between the two fluids. If the
273
viscous pressure drop between these two points exceeds the character-
274
istic random fluctuations of the capillary pressure threshold from one
275
pore throat to another along the interface, then the viscous pressure
276
field is dominant in determining at which of the two points considered
277
new pores are going to be invaded. On the contrary, if the random
278
fluctuations of capillary threshold exceed the viscous pressure drop be-
279
tween the two points, then this random pressure difference component
280
dominates. Its magnitude is of the same order as the average capillary
281
pressure value, γ/a. Hence, capillary effects are expected to dominate
282
for scales l such that lCaγ/a2 < γ/a, whereas viscous effects will dom-
283
inate for larger scales, such that lCaγ/a2 > γ/a: this explains the
284
observed cross over scale ξ = a/Ca between the structures character-
11
285
istic of capillary fingering and those characteristic of viscous fingering
286
.
287
4
288
to viscous fingering
289
In many situations of non-miscible biphasic flow in porous media, the
290
flow gets organized in fingering structures (preferential paths); in these
291
unstable configurations, the fluids arrange in fractal geometries with
292
nontrivial fractal dimensions depending on the observation scale, and
293
the scale range over which each dimension is observed depends on the
294
imposed boundary conditions (such as the macroscopic fluxes). This
295
microscopic structuration has far reaching consequences for the up-
296
scaled relationships between, for example, saturation and the pressure
297
difference between the two phases.
298
An example of upscaling from capillary
An example of such a situation has been mentioned briefly earlier
299
in this review:
if gravity is negligible, only capillarity and viscosity
300
play a role on the flow ; when a lowly viscous fluid displaces a more
301
viscous one, the fluid-fluid interface is unstable due to viscous pressure
302
gradients increasing at the most advanced parts of the invader, so that
303
fingers naturally arise. The development of such an interface instabil-
304
ity occuring during drainage was studied optically in Hele Shaw cells,
305
at several controlled injection rates (Løvoll et al., 2004; Toussaint et
306
al., 2005). Air was injected into an artifical porous medium composed
307
of a monolayer of immobile glass beads sandwiched between two glass
308
plates, and initially filled with a wetting dyed glycerol-water solution.
309
The Hele-Shaw cell dimensions were denoted L × W × H, H = 1 mm
310
being the cell thickness as well as the typical glass bead diameter; flow
311
was imposed along the length L, with impermeable lateralboundaries
312
defining a channel of width W (see Fig. 1). It was shown that the path-
313
way of the air, defined as the locations where the occupancy probability
12
Ca = 0.022
inlet
outlet
x
L-x Ca = 0.033
λW
outlet
inlet
a/Ca
x
W
λW
a/Ca
x
outlet
inlet
Ca = 0.062
L Figure 1: Invasion structure of a lowly viscous fluid (white) into a much more viscous one (dark grey) during drainage in an artificial 2D porous medium of width W and extent L, at three different extraction speeds. The position of the invasion tip is denoted x. Characteristic crossover scales between fractal regimes, λW and a/Ca, separate a straight finger structure, a viscous fingering geometry, and a capillary fingering geometry, down to the pore scale a. 314
exceeds half its maximum value, was a finger of width λW positioned
315
in the centre of the channel, with λ = 0.4. This was attributed to a
316
similarity between the process of selection of the the pore throats to be
317
invaded and a Dielectric Breakdown Model with η = 2, as was shown
318
by computing the average invasion speed taking into account the width
319
of the capillary threshold distribution (Toussaint et al., 2005). This
320
structure is illustrated in Fig. 1.
321
From approximations on the shape of the pressure around this fin-
322
ger, mostly controlled by the viscous pressure drop, one can derive an
323
upscaled pressure-saturation relation (Løvoll et al., 2010).
13
324
Indeed, the pressure presents to first order a linear viscous pressure
325
drop from the tip of the invasion cluster, at position x, to the outlet
326
of the system, at position L. Over the rest of the system, the pressure
327
gradient is screened by the finger, rendering the pressure in the wetting
328
fluid essentially constant at a value close to the sum of the air pressure
329
and the entrance pressure γ/a. Hence, the pressure difference between
330
the two phases, with a pressure in the wetting fluid Pw measured at
331
the outlet, the one in the non wetting phase equal to the atmospheric
332
pressure Pn.w. , and a correction to this entrance pressure, writes as ∆P ∗
=
Pw. − Pn.w. − γ/a = (L − x)∇P
(6)
=
(L − x)∆Pvisc /a
(7)
=
(L − x)∆Pcap Ca/a
(8)
=
(L − x)
γCa a2
(9)
333
where ∆Pvisc and ∆Pcap are considered at the pore scale. Thus, there
334
is a linear relationship between the viscous pressure drop accross the
335
cell and the distance between the finger tip and the outlet. Besides, the relationship between saturation and capillary number can be inferred from the fractal structure of the non-wetting invading fluid. At scales above the width λW , the finger is a linear structure of dimension 1. Between the scale λW and a/Ca, the structure has a viscous fingering geometry of fractal dimension Dv ∼ 1.5 (M˚ aløy et al., 1985; Løvoll et al., 2004). Between the crossover scale a/Ca and the pore scale a, the structure has a capillary fingering geometry of fractal dimension Dc = 1.83. Hence, the total number of pores invaded by the non viscous fluid can be evaluated as a function of these fractal dimensions, the ratio of the finger length to its width, x/(λW ), and the ratios of the latter length to the two others lengths, the crossover
14
length and the pore size. This leads to:
Nn.w.
x = λW
λW aCa−1
Dv
aCa−1 a
Dc (10)
Together with the relationship between the total number of pores and the characteristic model dimensions,
Ntot =
LW a2
(11)
and the relationship between the wetting phase and non-wetting phase saturations, Sn.w. = 1 − Sw. = 336
Nn.w. , Ntot
(12)
Eq. (10) leads to
1 − Sw. = Sn.w. = λ
Dv −1
a 2−Dv a2 ∆P ∗ Dv −Dc 1− Ca W γLCa
(13)
337
This relationship allows to collapse all the pressure difference
338
curves measured as a function of saturation in the set of experiments
339
performed by Løvoll et al. (2010) onto a unique master curve, for
340
capillary numbers ranging from around 0.008 to 0.12. Since P ∗ =
341
a2 ∆P ∗ /(γLCa) is nothing else than the capillary pressure measured
342
at the scale L of the experimental model, Eq. (13) in effect relates that
343
capillary pressure to the imposed seepage velocity. In other words, it
344
defines the dependence on Darcy flow velocity of what is commonly de-
345
noted dynamic capillary pressure, measured at scale L. This example
346
shows how both viscous and capillary effects play a role in constrain-
347
ing the geometry of the invasion structures, resulting in a dynamic
348
capillary pressure, as it is traditionally called (Hassanizadeh, 2002),
349
that is simply due to the upscaling of the invasion structure, with only
350
capillary and viscous effects seen at the REV scale, and without any
351
dynamic capillary/wetting effects occuring at the pore scale.
15
Ca = 0.009 Ca = 0.022 Ca = 0.029 Ca = 0.033 Ca = 0.054 Ca = 0.058 Ca = 0.060 Ca = 0.062 Ca = 0.079 Ca = 0.110
4000
Δ P*(Pa)
3000 2000 1000 0 0
0.05
0.1
S n.w.
0.15
0.2
0.25
Figure 2: Dependence of the pressure difference between the two phases and the saturation of the invading fluid, at different injection speeds. Figures 2 and 3 illustrate respectively the raw measurements at several injection speeds and how Eq. (13) allows to collapse these curves of saturation versus pressure The viscous pressure drop accross the cell drops linearly as the finger progresses into the cell, from a maximum value at the beginning of the invasion of γLCa/a2 , down to 0 at breakthrough of the invasion finger. In the previous equation, the wetting saturation is indeed initially 1 as it should be at initial total saturation, but we also obtain the final and maximum value of the residual wetting saturation as 1 − Sw.r. = Sn.w.r. = λDv −1
a 2−Dv CaDv −Dc . W
(14)
352
This relation between the residual saturation and the capillary number
353
is indeed consistent with the observed residual saturations, as shown
16
Snw(tbt)
1.25
1
0.2 0.1 0
0.75
0
0.1
0.2
P
*
Ca
0.5
Ca = 0.009 Ca = 0.022 Ca = 0.029 Ca = 0.033 Ca = 0.054 Ca = 0.058 Ca = 0.060 Ca = 0.062 Ca = 0.079 Ca = 0.110 * * P =1-S
0.25
0 0
0.2
0.4
0.8
0.6
1
1.2
*
S
Figure 3: The collapse of the relationship between the reduced pressure difference (between the two phases), P ∗ = a2 ∆P ∗ /(γLCa), and the reduced a −2+Dv saturation of the invading fluid, S∗ = λ1−Dv W CaDc −Dv Sn.w. , at different injection speeds, shows the influence of the structure on the upscaling. Dotted curve: prediction. Inset: Residual saturation at breakthrough.
17
354
in the inset of Fig.3.
355
Besides the relation between saturation and the macroscopic pres-
356
sure difference between the phases, other macroscopic relations can
357
be obtained via upscaling, as e.g., in some situations, the relative per-
358
meability. For example, in other experiments where both fluids were
359
injected at the same time, the trapped structures of wetting fluids
360
were observed to be fractal up to a certain cutoff depending on the
361
imposed flux (Tallakstad et al., 2009). The upscaling explaining the
362
cutoff and the structures allowed to explain the measured scaling law
363
of the relative permeability of the viscous phase as a function of the
364
imposed flux, κrel ∼ Ca−1/2 .
365
5
366
We have discussed the local flow structures that are observed ex-
367
perimentally during drainage in a disordered porous medium. They
368
are fractal, with a fractal dimension that depends on the observation
369
scale. At small scales, capillary fingering exhibits a fractal dimension
370
of 1.8 for two-dimensional media, and between 2 and 2.6 for three-
371
dimensional media. At larger scales a branched structure characteris-
372
tic of viscous fingering is seen, with a fractal dimension 1.6 for two-
373
dimensional systems. The crossover between the two behaviors occurs
374
at a length scale for which the differential viscous pressure drop equals
375
the typical capillary pressure threshold in the medium. This means
376
that for horizontal flow, unstable viscous fingering is always seen at
377
large enough scales, even if the medium exhibits no permeability het-
378
erogeneities at the Darcy scale. From the definition of the crossover
379
length, it follows that it scales as the inverse of the capillary number,
380
which explains why experiments performed at a given experimental
381
scale and at very slow flow rates have evidenced capillary fingering,
382
while those performed at very large flow rates have evidenced viscous
383
fingering. As for the effect of gravity, it can be to either destabilize
Conclusion
18
384
or stabilize the interface, depending on which fluid is the densest. In
385
the latter case, it acts against capillary effects and, when the displac-
386
ing fluid is the most viscous, against the destabilizing viscous forces,
387
resulting in an amplitude of the interface roughness that scales as a
388
power law of the generalized fluctuation number (or generalized Bond
389
number). In horizontal two-dimensional flows, viscous fingering is ob-
390
served to occur up to another characteristic length that is a fixed frac-
391
tion of the width of the medium. Upscaling of the local flow structures
392
is possible once one knows the fractal dimensions typical of the flow
393
regimes, and the relevant length scale range for each of them. We have
394
given an example of how the measured capillary pressure can be re-
395
lated theoretically to water saturation, a relation that is confirmed by
396
measurements. In that example, the capillary pressure measured at
397
the scale of the experimental setup exhibits dynamic features, i. e., a
398
dependence on the flow rate, that is fully explained by the geometry
399
of the upscaling, without any dynamic effects in the physical capillary
400
pressure as defined at the pore/interface scale.
401
6
402
This work was supported by the CNRS through a french-norwegian
403
PICS grant, the Alsace region through the REALISE program, and
404
the Norwegian NFR.
405
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