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FLUID INJECTION IN A POROUS MEDIUM: THE RADIAL SAFFMAN–TAYLOR INSTABILITY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 April 2024

SIENNA E. COOK
Affiliation:
Australian Maritime College, University of Tasmania, Launceston, Tasmania 7248, Australia e-mail: sienna.cook@utas.edu.au
LARRY K. FORBES*
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics & Physics, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania 7005, Australia e-mail: stephen.walters@utas.edu.au
STEPHEN J. WALTERS
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics & Physics, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania 7005, Australia e-mail: stephen.walters@utas.edu.au
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Abstract

We consider planar flow involving two viscous fluids in a porous medium. One fluid is injected through a line source at the origin and moves radially outwards, pushing the second, ambient fluid outwards. There is an interface between the two fluids and if the inner injected fluid is of lower viscosity, the interface is unstable to small disturbances and radially directed unstable Saffman–Taylor fingers are produced. A linearized theory is presented and is compared with nonlinear results obtained using a numerical spectral method. An additional theory is also discussed, in which the sharp interface is replaced with a narrow diffuse interfacial region. We show that the nonlinear results are in close agreement with the linearized theory for small-amplitude disturbances at early times, but that large-amplitude fingers develop at later times and can even detach completely from the initial injection region.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Australian Mathematical Publishing Association Inc.
Figure 0

Figure 1 Schematic diagram of the dimensionless Saffman–Taylor system with radial outflow. A line source is present at the origin and injects fluid with unit flux. The unperturbed initial interface is the unit circle (sketched with a dashed line, red online). The location of the (sharp) interface is $r = R(\theta ,t)$ and $\beta $ represents the viscosity ratio.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Stability diagram for modes $n=1, \ldots ,20$ over viscosity ratios $0 \leq \beta \leq 1$. Coloured curves represent contours of the growth function given in (3.14). (Colour available online.)

Figure 2

Figure 3 A comparison of the linearized interface (dashed lines, red online) with the predictions of the nonlinear sharp-interface model of Section 4 (solid line, blue online) for $\beta = 0.5$, $\sigma = 1.E-4$, $\epsilon = 0.05$. The nonlinear solution used $N=101$ Fourier coefficients, with Lanczos parameter $0.05$. Results are shown for initial mode (a) $m^{*}=5$ and (b) $m^{*}=9$.

Figure 3

Figure 4 Interfacial curvature $\kappa $ calculated for the nonlinear sharp-interface model of Section 4, for the same parameters as in Figure 3. The solution used $N=101$ Fourier coefficients, with Lanczos parameter $\lambda _T = 0.05$. Results are shown for initial mode (a) $m^{*}=5$ and (b) $m^{*}=9$.

Figure 4

Figure 5 A comparison of the linearized interface (dashed lines, red online) with the predictions of nonlinear sharp-interface model of Section 4 (solid line, blue online) for a ninth-mode perturbation ${m^{*} =9}$ and parameters $\beta = 0.5$, $\sigma = 1\times 10^{-4}$, $\epsilon = 0.05$, at the two times (a) $t=2$ and (b) $t=5.6$. The nonlinear solution used $N=101$ Fourier coefficients, here with Lanczos parameter $\lambda _T =0.02$.

Figure 5

Figure 6 The curvature for the nonlinear sharp-interface model of Section 4, for a ninth-mode perturbation $m^{*} =9$ and parameters $\beta = 0.5$, $\sigma = 1\times 10^{-4}$, $\epsilon = 0.05$. The nonlinear solution used $N=101$ Fourier coefficients, here with Lanczos parameter $\lambda _T =0.02$.

Figure 6

Figure 7 A comparison of the results of the nonlinear diffuse-interface approach of Section 5 with the predictions of the sharp-interface model of Section 4 (solid line, red online), for a ninth-mode perturbation $m^{*} =9$ with parameters $\beta = 0.5$, $\sigma = 1\times 10^{-4}$, $\epsilon _T = 0.05$. The diffuse-interface solution used $\tau = 1.5$.

Figure 7

Figure 8 Temperature profiles showing the detachment and shedding of fingers at eight early times, for a ninth-mode ($m^{*} =9$) perturbation. Here, $\beta = 0.5$ and $\tau = 1.05$. The temperature diffusion coefficient was $\sigma _H = 1\times 10^{-5}$, the initial temperature amplitude was $\epsilon _T = 0.1$ and the algorithm was run with ${(M,N)=(81,85)}$ coefficients.

Figure 8

Figure 9 A temperature profile showing detached fingers at time $t=3.6$ for the ninth-mode ($m^{*} =9$) perturbation in Figure 8. Here, $\beta = 0.5$, $\sigma _H = 1\times 10^{-5}$, $\tau = 1.05$, $\epsilon _T = 0.1$ and the number of modes was increased to $(M,N)=(101,105)$.