Experiments on transport of hydrophobic particles and gas bubbles in porous media.

Autor: Goldenberg, Lior, Hutcheon, Ian, Wardlaw, Norman
Zdroj: Transport in Porous Media; Apr1989, Vol. 4 Issue 2, p129-145, 17p
Abstrakt: Adhesion of hydrophobic colloids (clay minerals) on the surface of bubbles of air and the transport of the composite units formed by bubbles and mineral particles were observed in a glass micro model. When a clay mineral suspension flowed in a porous medium that contained bubbles of air trapped in small pores, particles accumulated preferentially on the upstream portion of the bubbles, and quasi-stable bubble-mineral particle units were formed. With an increase in the flow velocity, the particles moved along the interface between the bubble and the liquid and accumulated on the downstream portion of the bubbles. A large stress could mobilize the units which, occasionally, accumulated in larger voids. The mechanism suggested is adhesion of the particles on the surface of the bubble due to compression of their diffuse electrical double layer. The adsorbed particles can be moved by shear stresses which act in the region of water molecules between the well-organized layers of water on the surfaces of the bubble and the clay particles. A large enough shear stress causes the bubbles to become more streamlined, allowing them to move in the channel system. If in contact, the common lamina of the bubbles can withdraw and rupture. Bubbles transport from 20 to 50 times more particles than can be transported by average suspension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index