Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous Media

Abstract Foam can be used for gas mobility control in different subsurface applications. The success of foam-injection process depends on foam-generation and propagation rate inside the porous medium. In some cases, foam properties depend on the history of the flow or concentration of the surfactant...

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Main Authors: S. Kahrobaei, S. Vincent-Bonnieu, R. Farajzadeh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-08-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-09589-0
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spelling doaj-ab72169e939a46c991743c2275dd6f812020-12-07T23:59:26ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222017-08-01711910.1038/s41598-017-09589-0Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous MediaS. Kahrobaei0S. Vincent-Bonnieu1R. Farajzadeh2Delft University of TechnologyDelft University of TechnologyDelft University of TechnologyAbstract Foam can be used for gas mobility control in different subsurface applications. The success of foam-injection process depends on foam-generation and propagation rate inside the porous medium. In some cases, foam properties depend on the history of the flow or concentration of the surfactant, i.e., the hysteresis effect. Foam may show hysteresis behavior by exhibiting multiple states at the same injection conditions, where coarse-textured foam is converted into strong foam with fine texture at a critical injection velocity or pressure gradient. This study aims to investigate the effects of injection velocity and surfactant concentration on foam generation and hysteresis behavior as a function of foam quality. We find that the transition from coarse-foam to strong-foam (i.e., the minimum pressure gradient for foam generation) is almost independent of flowrate, surfactant concentration, and foam quality. Moreover, the hysteresis behavior in foam generation occurs only at high-quality regimes and when the pressure gradient is below a certain value regardless of the total flow rate and surfactant concentration. We also observe that the rheological behavior of foam is strongly dependent on liquid velocity.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-09589-0
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Kahrobaei
S. Vincent-Bonnieu
R. Farajzadeh
spellingShingle S. Kahrobaei
S. Vincent-Bonnieu
R. Farajzadeh
Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous Media
Scientific Reports
author_facet S. Kahrobaei
S. Vincent-Bonnieu
R. Farajzadeh
author_sort S. Kahrobaei
title Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous Media
title_short Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous Media
title_full Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous Media
title_fullStr Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous Media
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Study of Hysteresis behavior of Foam Generation in Porous Media
title_sort experimental study of hysteresis behavior of foam generation in porous media
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Abstract Foam can be used for gas mobility control in different subsurface applications. The success of foam-injection process depends on foam-generation and propagation rate inside the porous medium. In some cases, foam properties depend on the history of the flow or concentration of the surfactant, i.e., the hysteresis effect. Foam may show hysteresis behavior by exhibiting multiple states at the same injection conditions, where coarse-textured foam is converted into strong foam with fine texture at a critical injection velocity or pressure gradient. This study aims to investigate the effects of injection velocity and surfactant concentration on foam generation and hysteresis behavior as a function of foam quality. We find that the transition from coarse-foam to strong-foam (i.e., the minimum pressure gradient for foam generation) is almost independent of flowrate, surfactant concentration, and foam quality. Moreover, the hysteresis behavior in foam generation occurs only at high-quality regimes and when the pressure gradient is below a certain value regardless of the total flow rate and surfactant concentration. We also observe that the rheological behavior of foam is strongly dependent on liquid velocity.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-09589-0
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AT svincentbonnieu experimentalstudyofhysteresisbehavioroffoamgenerationinporousmedia
AT rfarajzadeh experimentalstudyofhysteresisbehavioroffoamgenerationinporousmedia
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