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Impact of Corner‐Bridge Flow on Capillary Pressure Curve: Insights From Microfluidic Experiments and Pore‐Network Modeling.

Authors :
Lan, Tian
Hu, Ran
Wang, Guan‐Xiong
Yang, Zhibing
Chen, Yi‐Feng
Source :
Water Resources Research; Dec2024, Vol. 60 Issue 12, p1-19, 19p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The capillary pressure curve is essential for predicting multiphase flow processes in geological systems. At low saturations, wetting films form and become important, but how wetting films control this curve remains inadequately understood. In this study, we combine microfluidic experiments with pore‐network modeling to investigate the impact of corner‐bridge flow on the capillary pressure curve in porous media. Using a CMOS camera and a confocal laser scanning microscopy, we directly observe the corner‐bridge flow under quasi‐static drainage displacement, revealing that corner‐bridge flow serves as an additional flow path to drain trapped water. Consequently, the capillary pressure curve shifts toward lower saturations, resulting in a reduced water residual saturation. We establish a theoretical criterion for the occurrence of corner‐bridge flow and develop a pore‐network model to simulate quasi‐static drainage, taking into account this additional flow path. Pore‐network modeling results agree well with our experimental observation. On this basis, we employ our pore‐network model to systematically analyze the impact of corner‐bridge flow on capillary pressure curve across varying porosity, pore‐scale disorder, and system size. Results indicate that the impact of corner‐bridge flow becomes more pronounced as porosity decreases and shape factor increases. Our findings demonstrate that the maximum decrease of water residual saturation is 0.19 when porosity is at its minimum, and the shape factor is at its maximum. This work bridges the gap between the pore‐scale mechanism and capillary pressure behavior and has significant implications for estimating the amount of extractable water and the CO2 storage capacity. Key Points: We directly observe the corner‐bridge flow serving as an additional flow path to drain the trapped water during quasi‐static drainageThe corner‐bridge flow causes a shift of capillary pressure curve toward low saturation and reduces residual water saturation Sw,resThe impact of corner‐bridge flow intensifies as porosity decreases and shape factor increases, with a maximum decrease in Sw,res of 0.19 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431397
Volume :
60
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Water Resources Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181847256
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024WR037690