Transition from viscous fingers to foam during drainage in heterogeneous porous media
Federico Lanza, Santanu Sinha, Alex Hansen, Alberto Rosso, Laurent, Talon

TL;DR
This study explores the transition from viscous fingering to foam formation during drainage in heterogeneous porous media, revealing how flow patterns evolve and are influenced by physical parameters using a pore network model.
Contribution
It introduces a pore network model that captures the transition from viscous fingers to foam, analyzing the effects of viscosity ratio and capillary number on this process.
Findings
Transition distance follows a power-law decay with parameters
Foam reduces global mobility after formation
Fragmentation of viscous fingers leads to foam development
Abstract
We investigate the behavior of drainage displacements in heterogeneous porous media finding a transition from viscous fingering to foam-like region. A pore network model incorporating the formation of blobs is adopted to study this phenomenon. By imposing a pressure difference between the inlet and outlet, we observe that the displacement pattern undergoes a significant transition from a continuous front of growing viscous fingers to the emergence of foam, which develops and propagates until breakthrough. This transition occurs at a specific distance from the inlet, which we measure and analyze as a function of the viscosity ratio and the capillary number, demonstrating that it follows a non-trivial power-law decay with both the parameters. Moreover, we discuss the relationship between the evolution of the total flow rate and the local pressure drop, showing that the foam developed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Enhanced Oil Recovery Techniques · Theoretical and Computational Physics
