Fluid Flow in the Subsurface

History, Generalization and Applications of Physical Laws

Specificaties
Gebonden, blz. | Engels
Springer International Publishing | e druk, 2016
ISBN13: 9783319434483
Rubricering
Springer International Publishing e druk, 2016 9783319434483
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Samenvatting

This book presents a systematic attempt to generalize several fundamental physical laws related to subsurface fluid flow that are important for a number of contemporary applications in the areas of hydrogeology, reservoir engineering and rock mechanics. It also covers the history of discovering these physical laws, their respective scope of validity, and their generalizations or extensions. 

The physical laws discussed include Darcy’s law, Darcy-Buckingham law and Hooke’s law. Darcy’s law is the fundamental law for subsurface fluid flow. For low-permeability media, it is not always adequate because of the strong fluid–solid interaction. Though the Darcy-Buckingham law is often used for modeling subsurface multiphase flow, it is only valid under the local equilibrium condition. This condition does not hold in many cases, especially when fingering flow occurs. It is well known that subsurface fluid flow is coupled with mechanical deformation of subsurface media; in some applications, this coupling can play a dominant role. The continuum-scale elastic deformation of natural rock, however, does not always follow the traditional form of Hooke’s law.

The book also presents applications of the proposed generalizations of the physical laws to several important engineering projects.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9783319434483
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:gebonden
Uitgever:Springer International Publishing

Inhoudsopgave

<p>Preface.- 1. Generalization of Darcy Law: Non-Darcian Liquid Flow in Low-permeability Media.- 2. Generalization of Darcy-Buckingham Law: Optimality and water flow in unsaturated media.- 3. Two-Part Hooke Model (TPHM): Theory, Validation and Applications.- 4. A Thermodynamic Hypothesis Regarding Optimality Principles for Flow Processes in Geosystems.- 5. Final Remarks.</p>

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        Fluid Flow in the Subsurface