Magnetically Assisted Separation of Weakly Magnetic Metal Ions in Porous Media. Part 2: Numerical Simulations
Muhammad Garba, Alwell Nwachukwu, Jamel Ali, Theo Siegrist, Munir Humayun, and Hadi Mohammadigoushki

TL;DR
This paper uses numerical simulations to study how magnetic fields influence the movement of metal ions in porous media, emphasizing the importance of accurate modeling and interspecies interactions for predicting transport behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a Brinkman-based model for magnetophoresis in porous media and compares it with experimental data, revealing the significance of medium permeability and interspecies hydrodynamic interactions.
Findings
Brinkman model accurately reproduces experimental transport trends.
Magnetic gradient is the primary force driving ion movement.
Paramagnetic and diamagnetic clusters interact, affecting transport dynamics.
Abstract
We present a numerical investigation of the magnetophoresis of metal ions in porous media under static, nonuniform magnetic fields. The multiphysics simulations couple momentum transport, mass diffusion, and magnetic field equations, with the porous medium modeled using two distinct approaches: a Stokes-based formulation incorporating effective diffusivity, and a Brinkman-based formulation that explicitly accounts for permeability and medium-induced drag. Comparison with recent experimental data [Nwachuwku et al. Submitted, 2025] reveals that the Stokes model partially fails to capture key trends, while the Brinkman model, with permeability accurately reproduces observed transport behavior on various porous media. Our simulations predict that both paramagnetic (MnCl2) and diamagnetic (ZnCl2) ions may form field-induced clusters under magnetic gradients over a range of concentrations of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNMR spectroscopy and applications · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · CO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions
