Path selection during wormhole growth
Y. Yang (1), S.S. Hakim (1), S. Bruns (1), K. Uesugi (2), K. N. Dalby, (1), S.L.S. Stipp (1), H.O. S{\o}rensen (1) ((1) Nano-Science Center,, Department of Chemistry, University of Copenhagen, (2) SPring-8, Japan)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the path of wormholes in porous media can be predicted by the minimum cumulative surface principle, revealing a deterministic process underlying wormhole growth and flow network formation.
Contribution
The study introduces a theoretical framework linking wormhole trajectories to the minimum cumulative surface and validates it with numerical simulations and microtomography observations.
Findings
Wormhole tips follow the migration of the farthest dissolution front.
The cumulative surface determines the dissolution front position.
Wormholing is a deterministic process, not purely stochastic.
Abstract
Growth of wormholes in porous media can lead to self-organization of flow networks with an overwhelming geometric complexity. Despite decades of study, the mechanism by which a dominant wormhole develops its path during growth remains elusive. Here we show that the trajectory of a growing wormhole can be predicted by identifying the flowpath with a so-called minimum cumulative surface. Our theoretical analysis indicates that the cumulative surface determines the position of the dissolution front. We then show, using numerical simulation based on greyscale nanotomography data, that the tip of an advancing pore always follows the migration of the most far reaching dissolution front. Finally, we show the good accord between theory and the observation with in situ microtomography. Our result suggests that wormholing is a deterministic process rather than, as classical theories imply, a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEnhanced Oil Recovery Techniques · CO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions · Hydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis
