We investigated the cluster-size distribution of the residual nonwetting phase in a sintered glass-bead porous medium at two-phase flow conditions, by means of micro-computed-tomography (μCT) imaging with pore-scale resolution. Cluster-size distribution functions and cluster volumes were obtained by image analysis for a range of injected pore volumes under both imbibition and drainage conditions; the field of view was larger than the porosity-based representative elementary volume (REV). We did not attempt to make a definition for a two-phase REV but used the nonwetting-phase cluster-size distribution as an indicator. Most of the nonwetting-phase total volume was found to be contained in clusters that were one to two orders of magnitude larger than the porosity-based REV. The largest observed clusters in fact ranged in volume from 65% to 99% of the entire nonwetting phase in the field of view. As a consequence, the largest clusters observed were statistically not represented and were found to be smaller than the estimated maximum cluster length. The results indicate that the two-phase REV is larger than the field of view attainable by μCT scanning, at a resolution which allows for the accurate determination of cluster connectivity. © 2013 American Physical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Georgiadis, A., Berg, S., Makurat, A., Maitland, G., & Ott, H. (2013). Pore-scale micro-computed-tomography imaging: Nonwetting-phase cluster-size distribution during drainage and imbibition. Physical Review E - Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics, 88(3). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.88.033002
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