Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-Up

We apply minimum kinetic energy principles from classic mechanics to heterogeneous porous media flow equations to derive and evaluate rotational flow components to determine bounding homogenous representations. Kelvin characterized irrotational motions in terms of energy dissipation and showed that...

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Main Authors: R. William Nelson, Gustavious P. Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-04-01
Series:Hydrology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/6/2/33
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spelling doaj-3f54af9497b940d9b2b8e903cd1cccf52020-11-25T01:36:36ZengMDPI AGHydrology2306-53382019-04-01623310.3390/hydrology6020033hydrology6020033Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-UpR. William Nelson0Gustavious P. Williams1Groundwater Hydrologist, Agricultural, and Civil Engineer, Retired, Ogden, UT 84401, USADepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USAWe apply minimum kinetic energy principles from classic mechanics to heterogeneous porous media flow equations to derive and evaluate rotational flow components to determine bounding homogenous representations. Kelvin characterized irrotational motions in terms of energy dissipation and showed that minimum dynamic energy dissipation occurs if the motion is irrotational; i.e., a homogeneous flow system. For porous media flow, reductions in rotational flow represent heterogeneity reductions. At the limit, a homogeneous system, flow is irrotational. Using these principles, we can find a homogenous system that bounds a more complex heterogeneous system. We present mathematics for using the minimum energy principle to describe flow in heterogeneous porous media along with reduced special cases with the necessary bounding and associated scale-up equations. The first, simple derivation involves no boundary differences and gives results based on direct Kelvin-type minimum energy principles. It provides bounding criteria, but yields only a single ultimate scale-up. We present an extended derivation that considers differing boundaries, which may occur between scale-up elements. This approach enables a piecewise less heterogeneous representation to bound the more heterogeneous system. It provides scale-up flexibility for individual model elements with differing sizes, and shapes and supports a more accurate representation of material properties. We include a case study to illustrate bounding with a single direct scale-up. The case study demonstrates rigorous bounding and provides insight on using bounding flow to help understand heterogeneous systems. This work provides a theoretical basis for developing bounding models of flow systems. This provides a means to justify bounding conditions and results.https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/6/2/33permeability boundingminimum energy dissipationpermeability scale-up
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. William Nelson
Gustavious P. Williams
spellingShingle R. William Nelson
Gustavious P. Williams
Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-Up
Hydrology
permeability bounding
minimum energy dissipation
permeability scale-up
author_facet R. William Nelson
Gustavious P. Williams
author_sort R. William Nelson
title Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-Up
title_short Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-Up
title_full Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-Up
title_fullStr Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-Up
title_full_unstemmed Bounding of Flow and Transport Analysis in Heterogeneous Saturated Porous Media: A Minimum Energy Dissipation Principle for the Bounding and Scale-Up
title_sort bounding of flow and transport analysis in heterogeneous saturated porous media: a minimum energy dissipation principle for the bounding and scale-up
publisher MDPI AG
series Hydrology
issn 2306-5338
publishDate 2019-04-01
description We apply minimum kinetic energy principles from classic mechanics to heterogeneous porous media flow equations to derive and evaluate rotational flow components to determine bounding homogenous representations. Kelvin characterized irrotational motions in terms of energy dissipation and showed that minimum dynamic energy dissipation occurs if the motion is irrotational; i.e., a homogeneous flow system. For porous media flow, reductions in rotational flow represent heterogeneity reductions. At the limit, a homogeneous system, flow is irrotational. Using these principles, we can find a homogenous system that bounds a more complex heterogeneous system. We present mathematics for using the minimum energy principle to describe flow in heterogeneous porous media along with reduced special cases with the necessary bounding and associated scale-up equations. The first, simple derivation involves no boundary differences and gives results based on direct Kelvin-type minimum energy principles. It provides bounding criteria, but yields only a single ultimate scale-up. We present an extended derivation that considers differing boundaries, which may occur between scale-up elements. This approach enables a piecewise less heterogeneous representation to bound the more heterogeneous system. It provides scale-up flexibility for individual model elements with differing sizes, and shapes and supports a more accurate representation of material properties. We include a case study to illustrate bounding with a single direct scale-up. The case study demonstrates rigorous bounding and provides insight on using bounding flow to help understand heterogeneous systems. This work provides a theoretical basis for developing bounding models of flow systems. This provides a means to justify bounding conditions and results.
topic permeability bounding
minimum energy dissipation
permeability scale-up
url https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5338/6/2/33
work_keys_str_mv AT rwilliamnelson boundingofflowandtransportanalysisinheterogeneoussaturatedporousmediaaminimumenergydissipationprinciplefortheboundingandscaleup
AT gustaviouspwilliams boundingofflowandtransportanalysisinheterogeneoussaturatedporousmediaaminimumenergydissipationprinciplefortheboundingandscaleup
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