12 mai 2022

Webinar Christopher MacMinn

Chris is an Associate Professor in the Department of Engineering Science at Oxford. He earned his PhD in Mechanical Engineering from MIT, after which he was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Yale Climate & Energy Institute at Yale University before joining Oxford in 2013. His research group at Oxford - the Poromechanics Lab - is an interdisciplinary team of engineers, physicists, mathematicians, and geoscientists. They study a variety of problems related to flow, transport, and deformation in porous media, with applications in soft materials and subsurface engineering. The common thread running through all of their work is the combination of mathematical modelling with high-resolution experiments to develop insight into complex natural and industrial systems. Their work has attracted support from the Royal Society, the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, and the European Research Council.
Fluid-fluid phase separation in a soft porous medium

Abstract: The interactions of two fluids within a porous medium depend strongly on flow conditions, wettability, and the structure of the pore space. At the pore scale, these interactions are characterised by the formation of wetting films that coat solid surfaces and occupy corners and throats, and the formation of non-wetting blobs that occupy larger pore bodies. The invasion of non-wetting blobs into narrow throats is energetically unfavorable, but it can be forced with a sufficiently high pressure gradient. In a soft porous medium, where the pore structure can deform in response to the flow, the most striking feature of two-fluid-phase flow is the tendency of the non-wetting phase to enlarge the pore space by pushing the solid grains apart, to the point of forming macroscopic cavities in the medium. These cavities can be much larger than the pore scale, and they form spontaneously when the energetic benefit of reducing the Laplace pressure exceeds the energetic cost of deforming the solid skeleton. Here, we consider this process through the lens of phase separation, where a non-wetting phase separates (or not) from a fluid-fluid-solid mixture. Motivated by experimental observations, we construct a phase-field model in which two immiscible fluids interact with a poroelastic solid skeleton. Our model captures the competing effects of elasticity, confinement, flow, and fluid-fluid-solid interactions. We then use our model to consider an initial distribution of non-wetting fluid in the pore space that separates into multiple cavities. We identify the key parameters that control phase separation, the conditions that favor the formation of cavities, and the characteristic size of the resulting cavities. Our results have implications for a wide variety of natural and industrial systems, such as the nucleation and growth of gas bubbles in lake beds and waste ponds.

12 mai 2022, 16h3017h30
Please contact J.-P. Laval and F. Romano for the link