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Pore-Scale Mixing and the Evolution of Hydrodynamic Dispersion in Porous Media

Alexandre Puyguiraud, Philippe Gouze, Marco Dentz

2021Physical Review Letters60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We study the interplay of pore-scale mixing and network-scale advection through heterogeneous porous media, and its role for the evolution and asymptotic behavior of hydrodynamic dispersion. In a Lagrangian framework, we identify three fundamental mechanisms of pore-scale mixing that determine large scale particle motion, namely, the smoothing of intrapore velocity contrasts, the increase of the tortuosity of particle paths, and the setting of a maximum time for particle transitions. Based on these mechanisms, we derive a theory that predicts anomalous and normal hydrodynamic dispersion in terms of the characteristic pore length, Eulerian velocity distribution, and Péclet number.

Topics & Concepts

Porous mediumTortuosityMixing (physics)Dispersion (optics)MechanicsScale (ratio)Eulerian pathAdvectionLength scaleParticle (ecology)Statistical physicsPhysicsMaterials scienceClassical mechanicsPorosityLagrangianThermodynamicsGeologyOpticsComposite materialQuantum mechanicsOceanographyMathematical physicsGroundwater flow and contamination studiesEnhanced Oil Recovery TechniquesHydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Analysis
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