A boundary integral method applied to the 3D water coning problem
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Publication:4426538
DOI10.1063/1.869077zbMATH Open1027.76615OpenAlexW2021616431MaRDI QIDQ4426538FDOQ4426538
Authors: A. Kucera, Stephen Lucas
Publication date: 15 January 2004
Published in: Physics of Fluids (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://semanticscholar.org/paper/ac22c1154e413fd353431792f83afda41b48cd35
Flows in porous media; filtration; seepage (76S05) Boundary element methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics (76M15)
Cites Work
- On a certain quadrature formula
- Quadrature Over a Pyramid or Cube of Integrands with a Singularity at a Vertex
- Accurate numerical integration of singular boundary element kernels over boundaries with curvature
- Some improvements of accuracy and efficiency in three dimensional direct boundary element method
- A comparison between various boundary integral formulations of the exterior acoustic problem
- An effective boundary element method for inhomogeneous partial differential equations
- A boundary-integral method applied to water coning in oil reservoirs
- A cusp-like free-surface flow due to a submerged source or sink
- Supercritical withdrawal from a two-layer fluid through a line sink
- Effective numerical treatment of boundary integral equations: A formulation for three‐dimensional elastostatics
- An advanced boundary integral equation method for three-dimensional thermoelasticity
- Selective withdrawal from a viscous two-layer system
- Bicubic Spline Interpolation
- TWODQD an adaptive routine for two-dimensional integration
- Infinite Froude number solutions to the problem of a submerged source or sink
Cited In (7)
- The lens of freshwater in a tropical island-- 2D withdrawal.
- Maximising output from oil reservoirs without water breakthrough
- On the computation of steady axisymmetric withdrawal from a two-layer fluid
- On starting conditions for a submerged sink in a fluid
- Optimal probes for withdrawal of uncontaminated fluid samples
- Flow due to a sink near a vertical wall, in infinitely deep fluid
- The design of a full-scale industrial mineral leaching process
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