Lattice Boltzmann simulations on the role of channel structure for reactive capillary infiltration
Danilo Sergi, Loris Grossi, Tiziano Leidi, Alberto Ortona

TL;DR
This study uses Lattice Boltzmann simulations to analyze how different channel geometries affect reactive capillary infiltration, revealing that channel structure and contact line pinning are key factors influencing flow dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic analysis of simplified pore structures to understand their impact on capillary infiltration, highlighting the importance of channel geometry over minimum radius.
Findings
Channel structure dominates infiltration behavior.
Pinning of the contact line significantly affects flow.
Round particle packing favors straight flow paths.
Abstract
It is widely recognized that the structure of porous media is of relevance for a variety of mechanical and physical phenomena. The focus of the present work is on capillarity, a pore-scale process occurring at the micron scale. We attempt to characterize the influence of pore shape for capillary infiltration by means of Lattice Boltzmann simulations in 2D with reactive boundaries leading to surface growth and ultimately to pore closure. The systems under investigation consist of single channels with different simplified morphologies: namely, periodic profiles with sinusoidal, step-shaped and zig-zag walls, as well as constrictions and expansions with rectangular, convex and concave steps. This is a useful way to decompose the complexity of typical porous media into basic structures. The simulations show that the minimum radius alone fails to characterize properly the infiltration…
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