A Primer on the Dynamical Systems Approach to Transport in Porous Media
Guy Metcalfe, Daniel Lester, and Michael Trefry

TL;DR
This paper introduces the dynamical systems approach to analyze complex fluid flow and solute transport in porous media, emphasizing Lagrangian kinematics and coherent structures to understand mixing and transport phenomena.
Contribution
It advocates for applying chaos theory methods to porous media flows, connecting dynamical systems tools with recent experimental visualization techniques.
Findings
LCSs organize flow regions and influence mixing.
Chaotic and regular flow regimes are characterized.
New visualization methods reveal LCSs in porous media.
Abstract
Historically, the dominant conceptual paradigm of porous media flow, solute mixing and transport was based on steady two-dimensional flows in heterogeneous porous media. Although it is now well recognised that novel transport phenomena can arise in unsteady and/or three-dimensional flows at both the pore- or Darcy-scales, appropriate methods for analysis and understanding of these more complex flows have not been widely employed. In this primer we advocate for methods borrowed from dynamical systems (chaos) theory, which aim to uncover the \emph{Lagrangian kinematics} of these flows: namely how fluid particle trajectories (which form a dynamical system) are organized and interact and the associated impacts on solute transport and mixing. This dynamical systems approach to transport is inherently Lagrangian, and the Lagrangian kinematics form Lagrangian coherent structures (LCSs),…
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