H24A-01
Gravity-Driven Flow of non-Newtonian Fluids in Heterogeneous Porous Media: a Theoretical and Experimental Analysis

Tuesday, 15 December 2015: 16:00
3016 (Moscone West)
Vittorio Di Federico1, Sandro Longo2, Valentina Ciriello1 and Luca Chiapponi2, (1)University of Bologna, Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Chimica, Ambientale e dei Materiali (DICAM), Bologna, Italy, (2)University of Parma, Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Ambiente Territorio e Architettura (DICATeA), Parma, Italy
Abstract:
A theoretical and experimental analysis of non-Newtonian gravity-driven flow in porous media with spatially variable properties is presented. The motivation for our study is the rheological complexity exhibited by several environmental contaminants (wastewater sludge, oil pollutants, waste produced by the minerals and coal industries) and remediation agents (suspensions employed to enhance the efficiency of in-situ remediation).

Natural porous media are inherently heterogeneous, and this heterogeneity influences the extent and shape of the porous domain invaded by the contaminant or remediation agent. To grasp the combined effect of rheology and spatial heterogeneity, we consider: a) the release of a thin current of non-Newtonian power-law fluid into a 2-D, semi-infinite and saturated porous medium above a horizontal bed; b) perfectly stratified media, with permeability and porosity varying along the direction transverse (vertical) or parallel (horizontal) to the flow direction. This continuous variation of spatial properties is described by two additional parameters.

In order to represent several possible spreading scenarios, we consider: i) instantaneous injection with constant mass; ii) continuous injection with time-variable mass; iii) instantaneous release of a mound of fluid, which can drain freely out of the formation at the origin (dipole flow).

Under these assumptions, scalings for current length and thickness are derived in self similar form. An analysis of the conditions on model parameters required to avoid an unphysical or asymptotically invalid result is presented.

Theoretical results are validated against multiple sets of experiments, conducted for different combinations of spreading scenarios and types of stratification. Two basic setups are employed for the experiments: I) direct flow simulation in an artificial porous medium constructed superimposing layers of glass beads of different diameter; II) a Hele-Shaw (HS) analogue made of two parallel plates set at an angle. The HS analogy is extended to power-law fluid flow in porous media with variable properties parallel or transverse to the flow direction.

Comparison with experimental results show that the proposed models capture the propagation of the current front and the current profile at intermediate and late time.