Premium
Viscous Fingering and Preferential Flow Paths in Heterogeneous Porous Media
Author(s) -
Tang Y. B.,
Li M.,
Bernabé Y.,
Zhao J. Z.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.983
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 2169-9356
pISSN - 2169-9313
DOI - 10.1029/2019jb019306
Subject(s) - viscous fingering , porous medium , percolation (cognitive psychology) , capillary action , flow (mathematics) , mechanics , materials science , subnetwork , hele shaw flow , percolation theory , capillary pressure , geology , porosity , geotechnical engineering , physics , computer science , open channel flow , composite material , computer security , conductivity , quantum mechanics , neuroscience , biology
Preferential flow channeling and viscous fingering are widely observed phenomena in heterogeneous porous media from the pore scale to the core and reservoir scales. The transition from capillary to viscous fingering with increasing injection rate is also a well‐known phenomenon. Based on the previously observed visual similarity of viscous fingers and preferential single‐phase flow paths in 2‐D simulations, we postulate that these single‐ and two‐phase flow patterns should also be interrelated in 3‐D porous media. Capillary fingering is a manifestation of invasion percolation, a process restricted to the subnetwork of pores obtained from the critical path analysis. We investigated single‐phase flow channeling by applying a method similar to critical path analysis to the flow rate field and compared the subnetwork thus determined to the set of invaded pipes in drainage simulations. Our aim is to quantify the relation between preferential flow paths and viscous fingering, its dependence on pore‐scale heterogeneity and pore connectivity, and ultimately to upscale the network observations to the field scale appropriate for the engineering applications involving drainage in heterogeneous media.