Harnessing elastic instabilities for enhanced mixing and reaction kinetics in porous media
Christopher A. Browne, Sujit S. Datta

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that adding dilute flexible polymers to fluids in porous media induces elastic instabilities, creating turbulent-like flows that significantly enhance mixing and reaction rates without inertial turbulence.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel method using elastic instabilities to generate turbulence-like flow in porous media, improving mixing efficiency and reaction kinetics.
Findings
3x reduction in mixing length
6x increase in solute dispersivity
3x increase in reaction rate
Abstract
Turbulent flows have been used for millennia to mix solutes; a familiar example is stirring cream into coffee. However, many energy, environmental, and industrial processes rely on the mixing of solutes in porous media where confinement suppresses inertial turbulence. As a result, mixing is drastically hindered, requiring fluid to permeate long distances for appreciable mixing and introducing additional steps to drive mixing that can be expensive and environmentally harmful. Here, we demonstrate that this limitation can be overcome just by adding dilute amounts of flexible polymers to the fluid. Flow-driven stretching of the polymers generates an elastic instability (EI), driving turbulent-like chaotic flow fluctuations, despite the pore-scale confinement that prohibits typical inertial turbulence. Using in situ imaging, we show that these fluctuations stretch and fold the fluid within…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies · Fluid Dynamics and Turbulent Flows
