Linear stability of radial displacements in porous media: Influence of velocity-induced dispersion and concentration-dependent diffusion
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3554643
DOI10.1063/1.1775431zbMath1187.76444OpenAlexW2029670475MaRDI QIDQ3554643
Christian Pankiewitz, Amir Riaz, Eckart Meiburg
Publication date: 22 April 2010
Published in: Physics of Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://semanticscholar.org/paper/858cc46b8e55965f72bd6b6b8d58f0bbd87a56dd
diffusionviscosityeigenvalues and eigenfunctionsflow simulationnumerical analysisflow instabilityflow through porous media
Related Items
Gravity currents with residual trapping, Stability analysis of the moving interface in piston- and non-piston-like displacements, Some analytical aspects of the radial fingering in porous medium, Miscible porous media displacements driven by non-vertical injection wells, Variable density and viscosity, miscible displacements in capillary tubes, Multidimensional upstream weighting for multiphase transport in porous media, On the growth of the mixing zone in miscible viscous fingering, Stability of miscible core–annular flows with viscosity stratification, Control of radial miscible viscous fingering, Unstable miscible displacements in radial flow with chemical reactions, Linear stability analysis of two fluid columns of different densities and viscosities in a gravity field
Cites Work
- Miscible quarter five-spot displacements in a Hele-Shaw cell and the role of flow-induced dispersion
- Radial source flows in porous media: Linear stability analysis of axial and helical perturbations in miscible displacements
- Stability of miscible displacements in porous media: Radial source flow
- Stability of displacement processes in porous media in radial flow geometries
- Nonlinear viscous fingering in miscible displacement with anisotropic dispersion
- Miscible porous media displacements in the quarter five-spot configuration. Part 3. Non-monotonic viscosity profiles
- Engineering Flows in Small Devices: Microfluidics Toward a Lab-on-a-Chip