An approximation to miscible fluid flows in porous media with point sources and sinks by an Eulerian-Lagrangian localized adjoint method and mixed finite element methods

被引:93
|
作者
Wang, H [1 ]
Liang, D
Ewing, RE
Lyons, SL
Qin, G
机构
[1] Univ S Carolina, Dept Math, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[2] Shandong Univ, Sch Math & Syst Sci, Jinan 250100, Peoples R China
[3] Texas A&M Univ, Inst Sci Computat, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[4] Mobil Technol Co, Upstream Strateg Res Ctr, Dallas, TX 75244 USA
来源
SIAM JOURNAL ON SCIENTIFIC COMPUTING | 2000年 / 22卷 / 02期
关键词
characteristic methods; Eulerian-Lagrangian methods; miscible fluid flows in porous media with wells; numerical simulation of convection-diffusion equations; reservoir simulation; subsurface contaminant transport;
D O I
10.1137/S1064827598349215
中图分类号
O29 [应用数学];
学科分类号
070104 ;
摘要
We develop an Eulerian Lagrangian localized adjoint method (ELLAM)-mixed finite element method (MFEM) solution technique for accurate numerical simulation of coupled systems of partial differential equations (PDEs), which describe complex fluid ow processes in porous media. An ELLAM, which was shown previously to outperform many widely used methods in the context of linear convection-diffusion PDEs, is presented to solve the transport equation for concentration. Since accurate fluid velocities are crucial in numerical simulations, an MFEM is used to solve the pressure equation for the pressure and Darcy velocity. This minimizes the numerical difficulties occurring in standard methods for approximating velocities caused by differentiation of the pressure and then multiplication by rough coefficients. The ELLAM-MFEM solution technique significantly reduces temporal errors, symmetrizes the governing transport equation, eliminates nonphysical oscillation and/or excessive numerical dispersion in many simulators, conserves mass, and treats boundary conditions accurately. Numerical experiments show that the ELLAM-MFEM solution technique simulates miscible displacements of incompressible fluid flows in porous media accurately with fairly coarse spatial grids and very large time steps, which are one or two orders of magnitude larger than the time steps used in many methods. Moreover, the ELLAM-MFEM solution technique can treat large mobility ratios, discontinuous permeabilities and porosities, anisotropic dispersion in tensor form, and point sources and sinks.
引用
收藏
页码:561 / 581
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条