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Journal of Porous Media

 

ISSN for PRINT: 1091-028X

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$713.00

Issues per year:

8

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2005, Volume8

Issue 3

  98 pages  

DOI: 10.1615/JPorMedia.v8.i3   

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  • Two-Phase Flow Experiments in a Geocentrifuge and the Significance of Dynamic Capillary Pressure Effect
  • Oubbol Oung
    Soil Investigation and Model Department, GeoDelft, P.O. Box 69; 2600AB Delft, The Netherlands

    S. Majid Hassanizadeh
    Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 80021, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands; also with Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences; Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands

    Adam Bezuijen
    Soil Investigation and Model Department, GeoDelft, P.O. Box 69; 2600AB Delft, The Netherlands


    ABSTRACT

    In recent years, geocentrifuge facilities have been used for the study of two-phase flow in porous media. For example, capillary pressure-saturation curves have been obtained by carrying out drainage and imbibition experiments on soil samples in a centrifuge. However, because two-phase flow in a centrifuge is accelerated, the question arises whether the resulting curves are representative. This issue is important in light of overwhelming evidence from the literature that the capillary pressure curves obtained under dynamic (flow) conditions may be a function of the rate of change of saturation. Thus, one may define a dynamic capillary pressure and a static capillary pressure, whose difference may be proportional to the time rate of change of saturation, with the coefficient of proportionality denoted by τ. In this work, we report on a series of drainage and imbibition experiments involving water and perchloroethylene (PCE) in two different kinds of sand (fine and coarse), carried out in a geocentrifuge. Using selective pressure transducers, both water and PCE pressures are measured dynamically at three locations within the soil column. Saturation is also measured at those locations by means of time domain reflectrometry. Results obtained here show that because of the dynamic effect, capillary pressure curves obtained in a geocentrifuge are distinctly different from static curves. The results have been used to calculate the coefficient τ for the two sands.

    DOI: 10.1615/JPorMedia.v8.i3.10

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