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Comparison of a Lattice‐Boltzmann Model, a Full‐Morphology Model, and a Pore Network Model for Determining Capillary Pressure–Saturation Relationships
Author(s) -
Vogel H.J.,
Tölke J.,
Schulz V. P.,
Krafczyk M.,
Roth K.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
vadose zone journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.036
H-Index - 81
ISSN - 1539-1663
DOI - 10.2136/vzj2004.0114
Subject(s) - capillary pressure , lattice boltzmann methods , porous medium , saturation (graph theory) , porosity , materials science , network model , mechanics , capillary action , lattice (music) , biological system , computer science , mathematics , composite material , physics , artificial intelligence , acoustics , biology , combinatorics
Effective hydraulic properties of porous media such as the capillary pressure–saturation relation and the hydraulic conductivity function are a direct manifestation of the underlying pore geometry. The porous structure of a macroscopically homogeneous porous medium (sintered glass) was measured in detail using X‐ray microtomography. We investigated the possibility of deriving the water characteristic on the basis of structure analysis. We compared three approaches differing in the amount of required input data, the effort of data processing, and their predictive potential. With increasing complexity, these were (i) a simple pore network model based on a few structural parameters and a simplified process model, (ii) a direct simulation of the pressure–saturation relation based on the full morphology of the porous structure together with a simplified process model, and (iii) Lattice‐Boltzmann (LB) simulations based on the full morphology of the porous structure and modeling the complete multiphase fluid dynamics. We found that the network model, the most simple approach, may be sufficient for estimating the main drainage curve, thus suggesting that the complex pore structure can be reduced to a small set of geometric properties. If dynamic effects are considered, the LB approach provides a reliable representation, but at the cost of substantial computational efforts. Since very thin water films exist in the dry range, the continuity of the water phase cannot be described correctly with the LB approach, which presently uses uniform grids.

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