1,717 research outputs found
Mobilization of a trapped non-wetting fluid from a three-dimensional porous medium
We use confocal microscopy to directly visualize the formation and complex
morphologies of trapped non-wetting fluid ganglia within a model 3D porous
medium. The wetting fluid continues to flow around the ganglia after they form;
this flow is characterized by a capillary number, Ca. We find that the ganglia
configurations do not vary for small Ca; by contrast, as Ca is increased above
a threshold value, the largest ganglia start to become mobilized and are
ultimately removed from the medium. By combining our 3D visualization with
measurements of the bulk transport, we show that this behavior can be
quantitatively understood by balancing the viscous forces exerted on the
ganglia with the pore-scale capillary forces that keep them trapped within the
medium. Our work thus helps elucidate the fluid dynamics underlying the
mobilization of a trapped non-wetting fluid from a 3D porous medium
Local pore size correlations determine flow distributions in porous media
The relationship between the microstructure of a porous medium and the
observed flow distribution is still a puzzle. We resolve it with an analytical
model, where the local correlations between adjacent pores, which determine the
distribution of flows propagated from one pore downstream, predict the flow
distribution. Numerical simulations of a two-dimensional porous medium verify
the model and clearly show the transition of flow distributions from
-function-like via Gaussians to exponential with increasing disorder.
Comparison to experimental data further verifies our numerical approach.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, supplemental materia
Drainage in a model stratified porous medium
We show that when a non-wetting fluid drains a stratified porous medium at
sufficiently small capillary numbers Ca, it flows only through the coarsest
stratum of the medium; by contrast, above a threshold Ca, the non-wetting fluid
is also forced laterally, into part of the adjacent, finer strata. The spatial
extent of this partial invasion increases with Ca. We quantitatively understand
this behavior by balancing the stratum-scale viscous pressure driving the flow
with the capillary pressure required to invade individual pores. Because
geological formations are frequently stratified, we anticipate that our results
will be relevant to a number of important applications, including understanding
oil migration, preventing groundwater contamination, and sub-surface CO
storage
Visualizing multiphase flow and trapped fluid configurations in a model three-dimensional porous medium
We report an approach to fully visualize the flow of two immiscible fluids
through a model three-dimensional (3D) porous medium at pore-scale resolution.
Using confocal microscopy, we directly image the drainage of the medium by the
non-wetting oil and subsequent imbibition by the wetting fluid. During
imbibition, the wetting fluid pinches off threads of oil in the narrow crevices
of the medium, forming disconnected oil ganglia. Some of these ganglia remain
trapped within the medium. By resolving the full 3D structure of the trapped
ganglia, we show that the typical ganglion size, and the total amount of
residual oil, decreases as the capillary number Ca increases; this behavior
reflects the competition between the viscous pressure in the wetting fluid and
the capillary pressure required to force oil through the pores of the medium.
This work thus shows how pore-scale fluid dynamics influence the trapped fluid
configurations in multiphase flow through 3D porous media
Microwave Dielectric Heating of Drops in Microfluidic Devices
We present a technique to locally and rapidly heat water drops in
microfluidic devices with microwave dielectric heating. Water absorbs microwave
power more efficiently than polymers, glass, and oils due to its permanent
molecular dipole moment that has a large dielectric loss at GHz frequencies.
The relevant heat capacity of the system is a single thermally isolated
picoliter drop of water and this enables very fast thermal cycling. We
demonstrate microwave dielectric heating in a microfluidic device that
integrates a flow-focusing drop maker, drop splitters, and metal electrodes to
locally deliver microwave power from an inexpensive, commercially available 3.0
GHz source and amplifier. The temperature of the drops is measured by observing
the temperature dependent fluorescence intensity of cadmium selenide
nanocrystals suspended in the water drops. We demonstrate characteristic
heating times as short as 15 ms to steady-state temperatures as large as 30
degrees C above the base temperature of the microfluidic device. Many common
biological and chemical applications require rapid and local control of
temperature, such as PCR amplification of DNA, and can benefit from this new
technique.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Strain-induced alignment in collagen gels
Collagen is the most abundant extracellular-network-forming protein in animal
biology and is important in both natural and artificial tissues, where it
serves as a material of great mechanical versatility. This versatility arises
from its almost unique ability to remodel under applied loads into anisotropic
and inhomogeneous structures. To explore the origins of this property, we
develop a set of analysis tools and a novel experimental setup that probes the
mechanical response of fibrous networks in a geometry that mimics a typical
deformation profile imposed by cells in vivo. We observe strong fiber alignment
and densification as a function of applied strain for both uncrosslinked and
crosslinked collagenous networks. This alignment is found to be irreversibly
imprinted in uncrosslinked collagen networks, suggesting a simple mechanism for
tissue organization at the microscale. However, crosslinked networks display
similar fiber alignment and the same geometrical properties as uncrosslinked
gels, but with full reversibility. Plasticity is therefore not required to
align fibers. On the contrary, our data show that this effect is part of the
fundamental non-linear properties of fibrous biological networks.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures. 1 supporting material PDF with 2 figure
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