Issue 42, 2013

Drainage in two-dimensional porous media with polymer solutions

Abstract

We report experimental and numerical results concerning time-resolved biphasic flows in 2D model porous media involving polymer solutions. We focus on the case where a more viscous but non-Newtonian fluid displaces a wetting fluid. Similar to the Newtonian case, a transition from capillary fingering to a stable invading front is observed when the capillary number is increased. However, our results show that this transition is sharpened because of the shear-thinning behavior of the polymer solutions. At a given capillary number, the width of the invading front and correlatively the residual saturation are greater for a shear-thinning fluid than for a Newtonian one. Furthermore, we also find that the partially hydrolyzed polyacrylamide solutions investigated exhibit a rather strong slippage at low flow rates, which leads to even greater fingering. Experiments conducted in microfluidic micromodels are in quantitative agreement with time dependent non-Newtonian pore-network simulations. All of these effects are well captured by a simple model that leads to quantitative predictions of the drainage by shear-thinning fluids with slip boundary conditions.

Graphical abstract: Drainage in two-dimensional porous media with polymer solutions

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 May 2013
Accepted
13 Aug 2013
First published
14 Aug 2013

Soft Matter, 2013,9, 10174-10185

Drainage in two-dimensional porous media with polymer solutions

J. Beaumont, H. Bodiguel and A. Colin, Soft Matter, 2013, 9, 10174 DOI: 10.1039/C3SM51480C

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