05608nam 2200697 a 450 991083104890332120230725053016.01-280-66772-997866136446573-527-63671-43-527-63670-63-527-63669-2(CKB)3460000000003449(EBL)822723(OCoLC)778339411(SSID)ssj0000550580(PQKBManifestationID)11341226(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000550580(PQKBWorkID)10509321(PQKB)10238001(MiAaPQ)EBC822723(EXLCZ)99346000000000344920120124d2011 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrFlow and transport in porous media and fractured rock[electronic resource] from classical methods to modern approaches /Muhammad Sahimi2nd ed.Weinheim, Germany Wiley-VCHc20111 online resource (735 p.)Description based upon print version of record.3-527-40485-6 Includes bibliographical references (p. 633-700) and index.Flow and Transport in Porous Media and Fractured Rock; Contents; Preface to the Second Edition; Preface to the First Edition; 1 Continuum versus Discrete Models; 1.1 A Hierarchy of Heterogeneities and Length Scales; 1.2 Long-Range Correlations and Connectivity; 1.3 Continuum versus Discrete Models; 2 The Equations of Change; 2.1 The Mass Conservation Equation; 2.2 The Momentum Equation; 2.3 The Diffusion and Convective-Diffusion Equations; 2.4 Fluid Flow in Porous Media; 3 Characterization of Pore Space Connectivity: Percolation Theory; 3.1 Network Model of a Porous Medium3.2 Percolation Theory3.2.1 Bond and Site Percolation; 3.2.2 Computer Simulation and Counting the Clusters; 3.2.3 Bicontinuous Porous Materials; 3.3 Connectivity and Clustering Properties; 3.4 Flow and Transport Properties; 3.5 The Sample-Spanning Cluster and Its Backbone; 3.6 Universal Properties; 3.7 The Significance of Power Laws; 3.8 Dependence of Network Properties on Length Scale; 3.9 Finite-Size Effects; 3.10 Random Networks and Continuum Models; 3.11 Differences between Network and Continuum Models; 3.12 Porous Materials with Low Percolation Thresholds3.13 Network Models with Correlations3.14 A Glance at History; 4 Characterization of the Morphology of Porous Media; 4.1 Porosity; 4.2 Fluid Saturation; 4.3 Specific Surface Area; 4.4 The Tortuosity Factor; 4.5 Correlations in Porosity and Pore Sizes; 4.6 Surface Energy and Surface Tension; 4.7 Laplace Pressure and the Young-Laplace Equation; 4.8 Contact Angles and Wetting: The Young-DupreĢ Equation; 4.9 The Washburn Equation and Capillary Pressure; 4.10 Measurement of Capillary Pressure; 4.11 Pore Size Distribution; 4.12 Mercury Porosimetry; 4.12.1 Pore Size Distribution4.12.2 Pore Length Distribution4.12.3 Pore Number Distribution; 4.12.4 Pore Surface Distribution; 4.12.5 Particle Size Distribution; 4.12.6 Pore Network Models; 4.12.7 Percolation Models; 4.13 Sorption in Porous Media; 4.13.1 Classifying Adsorption Isotherms and Hysteresis Loops; 4.13.2 Mechanisms of Adsorption; 4.13.3 Adsorption Isotherms; 4.13.4 Distributions of Pore Size, Surface, and Volume; 4.13.5 Pore Network Models; 4.13.6 Percolation Models; 4.14 Pore Size Distribution from Small-Angle Scattering Data; 4.15 Pore Size Distribution from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance4.16 Determination of the Connectivity of Porous Media4.17 Fractal Properties of Porous Media; 4.17.1 Adsorption Methods; 4.17.2 Chord-Length Measurements; 4.17.3 The Correlation Function Method; 4.17.4 Small-Angle Scattering; 4.17.5 Porosity and Pore Size Distribution of Fractal Porous Media; 5 Characterization of Field-Scale Porous Media: Geostatistical Concepts and Self-Affine Distributions; 5.1 Estimators of a Population of Data; 5.2 Heterogeneity of a Field-Scale Porous Medium; 5.2.1 The Dykstra-Parsons Heterogeneity Index; 5.2.2 The Lorenz Heterogeneity Index5.2.3 The Index of VariationIn this standard reference of the field, theoretical and experimental approaches to flow, hydrodynamic dispersion, and miscible displacements in porous media and fractured rock are considered. Two different approaches are discussed and contrasted with each other. The first approach is based on the classical equations of flow and transport, called 'continuum models'. The second approach is based on modern methods of statistical physics of disordered media; that is, on 'discrete models', which have become increasingly popular over the past 15 years. The book is unique in its scope, since (1) thePorous materialsMathematical modelsTransport theoryMathematical modelsGroundwater flowMathematical modelsRocksPermeabilityMathematical modelsPorous materialsMathematical models.Transport theoryMathematical models.Groundwater flowMathematical models.RocksPermeabilityMathematical models.530.138530.4/15530.415Sahimi Muhammad21514MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910831048903321Flow and transport in porous media and fractured rock1418792UNINA