Abstract:
Fluid transport in porous media has been an area of intense research due to its importance
in a number of chemical and allied industries. Modeling flow through porous media at the
engineering scale usually employs semi empirical equations which assume the medium to be
a continuum. Only limited work is available on flow of emulsion (oil and water in different
proportions) through porous media. Detailed experimentation is, therefore, needed to
understand the single- and multi-phase (emulsion) flow phenomena through porous media.
The dissertation reports on the preparation of oil–in–water (o/w) and water in oil (w/o)
emulsions, and their stability and rheology. An in-depth study was carried out for flow of
Newtonian and non–Newtonian (emulsion) fluids through porous media. Computational
study of the single phase fluid flow through an isotropic porous media was carried out using
viscous, Reynolds averaging Navier–Stokes (RANS) and large eddy simulation (LES)
approaches.
The mathematical and statistical approach was adopted to study the formation and
stability of o/w emulsion with an integrated hybrid genetic algorithm (GA) coupled with
feed-forward back-propagation artificial neural network (BPANN) and response surface
methodology (RSM) based on Box–Behnken design (BBD). The hybrid GA model was
found to be useful in the optimization of process parameters. The optimum condition
predicted by the hybrid GA was 0.913 of emulsion stability index, ESI24, with 4.70% error for
50% (v/v) o/w emulsion, 2% (w/v) surfactant, 5691 revolutions per minute (rpm) of stirring
for 5 min time.
The rheological behavior of o/w and w/o emulsions with varying internal phase
concentrations (10–80%) and an anionic surfactant, i.e. sodium dodecyl benzene sulfonate
(SDBS) varying in concentration from 0.5 to 2 w/v %. at different temperatures (25–50 0C)
was studied. A controlled stress rotational viscometer is used with shear rates ranging from 1
to 100 s1. The emulsions exhibited typical shear thinning behavior and described well by the
power law relationship between shear stress and shear rate. Different viscosity models have
been tested and fitted with the experimental rheological data using rigorous-linear/non-linear
regression analysis. The Herschel–Bulkley model described the rheological data significantly
well. It was observed that the emulsion viscosity and pseudoplasticity increased with an
increase in oil concentration. The Herschel-Bulkley and power law models better represented
the emulsion rheological behavior as compared to the Casson models.
The rise in nonlinearity in Darcy law to describe the evolution of inertial effects in a
porous medium has been investigated experimentally. The demarcation limit of the various
flow regimes (pre-Darcy, Darcy, transition and non-Darcy) is highlighted, which enabled
accurate determination of permeability (K) and form drag coefficient (FD) for different types
iv
of porous media. It is observed that the flow changes from weak inertial regime to quadratic
Forchheimer regime at critical Re in between 5 to 10 and the microscopic inertial effect is the
governing factor which leads to the transition from the Darcy to non-Darcy flow regimes.
The detailed microscopic pore hydrodynamics in the form of flow streamlines and velocity
contours is observed over the Darcy and non-Darcy flow regimes, i.e. 0.02 ReD 30.
Further, emulsion (o/w) flow behaviour is investigated for different oil volume fractions
(10-80% v/v) and porous media, such as packed bed with four different sizes of glass beads.
The rheological properties of emulsions flowing through the porous media have been studied
on the basis of shear stress ( w ) versus shear rate (8us/Rh) relationship. It is observed that the
emulsion volume fraction significantly influences the porous bed pressure drop. Pressure
drop data d P dL across the porous bed for all sets of o/w emulsions increases with an
increase in emulsion volume fraction, increases with a decrease in particle diameter (glass
beads) and an increase in medium porosity. An increase in shear stress and volume fraction
during percolation of emulsions through the porous bed is observed. Further, it is found that
the effective viscosity of the emulsion for porous bed of different particle diameter decreases
with an increase in shear rate and resistance factor (RF) for different porous bed increases
with an increase in emulsion volume fraction and decreases with an increase in emulsion
injection rate. The pressure drop across the core holder increased with emulsion injection
flow rate for all three different sand pack core holders (S-A, S-B, and S-C) studied in the
present work. Pressure drop also increases with an increase in emulsion volume fraction due
to the increase in emulsion viscosity. It is seen that the permeability ratio across the core
holder decreases with an increase in pore volume (PV) of emulsion injected. The
Permeability reduction behaviour of porous media is investigated by observing the change in
pressure drop across the core holder as a function of number of pore volume of emulsion
injected. The permeability reduction across the core holder decreased largely with an increase
in emulsion volume fraction and also with an increase in the number of pore volume injected.
The laminar flow and turbulent characteristics of flow through an isotropic porous media
was studied assuming it to be a representative elementary volume (REV) and comprising an
array of square or circular cylinders. Both porous media porosity () and Reynolds number
based on particle diameter (Rep), were varied over a wide range. Viscous, Low Re k–
turbulence, standard k– turbulence, pseudo-direct numerical simulations (DNS), and large
eddy simulation (LES) approaches were used in these studies. The turbulent parameters
predicted using low Re k––LB turbulent model were found to be in good agreement with the
LES as compared to that with v2f model and the predictions of the pressure gradient were
found to be in good agreement with the Forchheimer-extended Darcy law. The low Re–k––
LB model was found to be valid only for flows with Rep > 300.