Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix models

The accurate description of fluid flow and transport in fractured porous media is of paramount importance to capture the macroscopic behavior of an oil reservoir, a geothermal system, or a CO2 sequestration site, to name few applications. The construction of accurate simulation models for flow in fr...

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Main Authors: Fumagalli Alessio, Keilegavlen Eirik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:Oil & Gas Science and Technology
Online Access:https://ogst.ifpenergiesnouvelles.fr/articles/ogst/full_html/2019/01/ogst170210/ogst170210.html
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spelling doaj-cef859a0d35749f8a3a488be179a1ae72021-03-02T09:30:12ZengEDP SciencesOil & Gas Science and Technology1294-44751953-81892019-01-01744110.2516/ogst/2019008ogst170210Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix modelsFumagalli AlessioKeilegavlen EirikThe accurate description of fluid flow and transport in fractured porous media is of paramount importance to capture the macroscopic behavior of an oil reservoir, a geothermal system, or a CO2 sequestration site, to name few applications. The construction of accurate simulation models for flow in fractures is challenging due to the high ratio between a fracture’s length and width. In this paper, we present a mixed-dimensional Darcy problem which can represent the pressure and Darcy velocity in all the dimensions, i.e. in the rock matrix, in the fractures, and in their intersections. Moreover, we present a mixed-dimensional transport problem which, given the Darcy velocity, describes advection of a passive scalar into the fractured porous media. The approach can handle both conducting and blocking fractures. Our computational grids are created by coarsening of simplex tessellations that conform to the fracture’s surfaces. A suitable choice of the discrete approximation of the previous model, by virtual finite element and finite volume methods, allows us to simulate complex problems with a good balance of accuracy and computational cost. We illustrate the performance of our method by comparing to benchmark studies for two-dimensional fractured porous media, as well as a complex three-dimensional fracture geometry.https://ogst.ifpenergiesnouvelles.fr/articles/ogst/full_html/2019/01/ogst170210/ogst170210.html
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fumagalli Alessio
Keilegavlen Eirik
spellingShingle Fumagalli Alessio
Keilegavlen Eirik
Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix models
Oil & Gas Science and Technology
author_facet Fumagalli Alessio
Keilegavlen Eirik
author_sort Fumagalli Alessio
title Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix models
title_short Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix models
title_full Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix models
title_fullStr Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix models
title_full_unstemmed Dual Virtual Element Methods for Discrete Fracture Matrix models
title_sort dual virtual element methods for discrete fracture matrix models
publisher EDP Sciences
series Oil & Gas Science and Technology
issn 1294-4475
1953-8189
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The accurate description of fluid flow and transport in fractured porous media is of paramount importance to capture the macroscopic behavior of an oil reservoir, a geothermal system, or a CO2 sequestration site, to name few applications. The construction of accurate simulation models for flow in fractures is challenging due to the high ratio between a fracture’s length and width. In this paper, we present a mixed-dimensional Darcy problem which can represent the pressure and Darcy velocity in all the dimensions, i.e. in the rock matrix, in the fractures, and in their intersections. Moreover, we present a mixed-dimensional transport problem which, given the Darcy velocity, describes advection of a passive scalar into the fractured porous media. The approach can handle both conducting and blocking fractures. Our computational grids are created by coarsening of simplex tessellations that conform to the fracture’s surfaces. A suitable choice of the discrete approximation of the previous model, by virtual finite element and finite volume methods, allows us to simulate complex problems with a good balance of accuracy and computational cost. We illustrate the performance of our method by comparing to benchmark studies for two-dimensional fractured porous media, as well as a complex three-dimensional fracture geometry.
url https://ogst.ifpenergiesnouvelles.fr/articles/ogst/full_html/2019/01/ogst170210/ogst170210.html
work_keys_str_mv AT fumagallialessio dualvirtualelementmethodsfordiscretefracturematrixmodels
AT keilegavleneirik dualvirtualelementmethodsfordiscretefracturematrixmodels
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