Аннотации:
© 2019 American Physical Society. While it is well known that permeability is a tensorial property, it is usually reported as a scalar property or only diagonal values are reported. However, experimental evaluation of tensorial flow properties is problematic. Pore-scale modeling using three-dimensional (3D) images of porous media with subsequent upscaling to a continuum scale (homogenization) is a valuable alternative. In this study, we explore the influence of different types of boundary conditions on the external walls of the representative modeling domain along the applied pressure gradient on the magnitude and orientation of the computed permeability tensor. To implement periodic flow boundary conditions, we utilized stochastic reconstruction methodology to create statistically similar (to real porous media structures) geometrically periodic 3D structures. Stochastic reconstructions are similar to encapsulation of the porous media into statistically similar geometrically periodic one with the same permeability tensor. Seven main boundary conditions (BC) were implemented: Closed walls, periodic flow, slip on the walls, linear pressure, translation, symmetry, and immersion. The different combinations of BCs amounted to a total number of 15 BC variations. All these BCs significantly influenced the resulting tensorial permeabilities, including both magnitude and orientation. Periodic boundary conditions produced the most physical flow patterns, while other classical BCs either suppressed crucial transversal flows or resulted in unphysical currents. Our results are crucial to performing flow properties upscaling and will be relevant to computing not only single-phase but also multiphase flow properties. Moreover, other calculation of physical properties such as some mechanical, transport, or heat conduction properties may benefit from the technique described in this study.