Surface‐Volume Scaling Controlled by Dissolution Regimes in a Multiphase Flow Environment

Author:

Zhou Chen‐Xing12,Hu Ran12ORCID,Deng Hang3ORCID,Ling Bowen45ORCID,Yang Zhibing12ORCID,Chen Yi‐Feng12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Water Resources Engineering and Management Wuhan University Wuhan China

2. Key Laboratory of Rock Mechanics in Hydraulic Structural Engineering of the Ministry of Education Wuhan University Wuhan China

3. Department of Energy & Resources Engineering College of Engineering Peking University Beijing China

4. Institute of Mechanics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

5. School of Engineering Science University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractFluid‐rock dissolution occurs ubiquitously in geological systems. Surface‐volume scaling is central to predicting overall dissolution rate R involved in modeling dissolution processes. Previous works focused on single‐phase environments but overlooked the multiphase‐flow effect. Here, through limestone‐based microfluidics experiments, we establish a fundamental link between dissolution regimes and scaling laws. In regime I (uniform), the scaling is consistent with classic law, and a satisfactory prediction of R can be obtained. However, the scaling for regime II (localized) deviates significantly from classic law. The underlying mechanism is that the reaction‐induced gas phase forms a layer, acting as a barrier that hinders contact between the acid and rock. Consequently, the error between measurement and prediction continuously amplifies as dissolution proceeds; the predictability is poor. We propose a theoretical model that describes the regime transition, exhibiting excellent agreement with experimental results. This work offers guidance on the usage of scaling law in multiphase flow environments.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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