Affiliation:
1. Dipartimento di Ingegneria e Architettura, Università degli Studi di Parma 1 , Parco Area delle Scienze 181/A, 43124 Parma, Italy
2. Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Chimica, Ambientale e dei Materiali (DICAM), Università di Bologna 2 , Viale Risorgimento, 2, 40136 Bologna, Italy
Abstract
We investigate the influence of fluid rheology on flow in a finite rock fracture with vertically varying aperture and subject to competing drainage mechanisms due to a permeable substrate and a draining edge. The flow is due to the release of a finite volume of fluid, and the rheology of the fluid is either Newtonian, Ostwald–deWaele, or Herschel–Bulkley. The Hele–Shaw analogy between lubrication and seepage flows allows extending our results to a porous medium with permeability and porosity varying in the vertical direction. The general solution is numerical, except for a self-similar solution derived for Newtonian fluids in a constant aperture fracture and another for Ostwald–deWaele fluids without substrate drainage. Results for the profile of the current and the volume remaining within the fracture, or drained at the substrate and edge, depend on a dimensionless parameter λ incorporating fluid rheology, fracture geometry, and ambient depth; drainage times exhibit order of magnitude variations depending on λ. A second dimensionless parameter, λ′, intervenes for Herschel–Bulkley fluids, with λ′→∞ for Ostwald–deWaele fluids. The theoretical model is validated with a series of experiments conducted with a novel experimental apparatus, accurately reproducing the condition of substrate drainage and allowing the experimental determination of λ and λ′. The agreement between theory and experimental results for both configurations with constant and V-shaped aperture is quite good, considering model approximations and experimental uncertainties. The present analysis shows how domain anisotropy, though simply schematized, and fluid rheology are relevant for the correct estimation of all integral variables, such as the residual fluid volume in the fracture as a function of time.
Subject
Condensed Matter Physics,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Mechanics of Materials,Computational Mechanics,Mechanical Engineering
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献