Title: Longitudinal Dispersion in Porous Media
1Longitudinal Dispersion in Porous Media
- A. G. Hunt and T. E. Skinner
- Department of Physics
- Wright State University
2What is longitudinal dispersion?
- It is what causes contaminant plumes to spread
out in the direction of flow. - The spreading is due to heterogeneity in the
medium. - Consider a (saturated) medium that is, at the
pore scale, homogeneous in the mean. - Heterogeneity comes from distribution of pore
sizes (and shapes).
3For such systems we know already
- K (the hydraulic conductivity)
- ? (the electrical conductivity)
- ka (the air permeability)
- D (the diffusion constants, solute and gas)
- Electromechanical properties
- Thermal conductivity (?)
- as functions of saturation.
4In fact we have developed a systematic approach
which yields all of these properties in terms of
either critical path analysis (from percolation
theory), percolation scaling, or both. How would
one incorporate dispersion into such a mix?
except thermal conductivity
5ANSWER
Find the pdf W(gmin) that a particular
path through the system is limited by a
minimum conductance gmin, find the time it takes
for a particle to traverse the path with gmin,
and use the probabilistic transformation W(gmin)
dgmin W(t) dt.
6Important Percolation Input
- Saturated K
- K (S)
- ? (S)
- kA (S)
- dispersion
- Competition
- Geometry (except very near threshold)
- Topology (almost all)
- Topology exclusively
- both
7For K, competition between pore-size distribution
and topology puts controlling g enough past
critical percolation that paths are not fractal.
Dispersion is still influenced by fractal path
distribution.
Exactly this contrast Is built into our
calculation framework
8Two inputs to t(g)
- Pore-size distribution (geometry) and flow rates
(streamlines) - Tortuosity (topology of connections)
9For any pore of radius r, cross-sectional area A
t ? r /v ? r A / Q
For a path with minimum pore radius r
10Topological complication (tortuosity)
Note that we choose d for optimal path along
backbone cluster
Product of two
11Approximate distribution of controlling
conductances (from previous publications),
giving streamline probabilities actual
distribution defined in terms of the exponential
integral, but also with logarithmic singularity.
Distribution comes from cluster statistics of
percolation theory with sharp cut-off at maximum
departure from critical percolation and minimum
cluster size equal to system length, x.
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17Work left to do
- Tortuosity cannot actually diverge in a finite
system. - Compare and contrast with Stanleys group, which
uses a distribution of arrival times other than
the optimal one, but does not use distribution of
controlling conductances. - Other?
18Conclusions
- We have made an interesting start on a
complicated problem. - It is widely believed that the saturated
hydraulic conductivity and dispersion are closely
related note that g value for which t has a
local minimum is closely related to the optimal g
value which defines the saturated hydraulic
conductivity it also produces a spike in solute
arrival - Whether specific results at this point are
compatible with experiment is a little doubtful
the tail is probably not fat enough and it is not
clear if such a spike as predicted has been
observed.