Viscous fingering is fluid dynamics instability induced on the displacement front when a less viscous fluid (LVF) displaces a more viscous fluid (MVF), thereby reducing the displacement efficiency. The displacement of a denser fluid by a less dense fluid produces a gravitational tongue. This gravitational segregation also reduces the displacement efficiency. In this study, the three-dimensional structure of the fingering pattern at the viscous fingering to gravitational segregation boundary was examined using X-ray microtomography on a packed bed of particles. At low gravity numbers, viscous fingering resembled that without gravity characterized by nonlinear interaction including tip-splitting, shielding, and coalescence. At intermediate gravity numbers, viscous fingering is associated with the gravitational tongue due to segregation. At high gravity numbers, a clear gravitational tongue penetrates from the inlet to the outlet. Consequently, the concentration near the injection point decreases and exhibits a flat profile in the flow direction. The displacement efficiency decreases with increasing gravity number, with the highest value achieved without gravity but depends on many factors, including the viscosity ratio and Péclet number.
When viscosity and density contrast exist in the vertical miscible displacement in porous media between two fluids, the interplay between the viscous force and gravity determines the interface stability. Two stability criteria are derived to determine the interface stability. Hill's and Dumore's stability criteria are used to determine the interface stability of the sharp and diffused interface, respectively. In this study, we visualized the crossover between unstable displacement and stable displacement for a vertical displacement in porous media using microfocused x-ray computed tomography. The experiments were divided into four possible configurations: (1) unconditionally stable (gravitationally stable-viscously stable), (2) unconditionally unstable (gravitationally unstable-viscously unstable), (3) conditionally stable (gravitationally stable-viscously unstable), and (4) conditionally stable (gravitationally unstable, viscously stable). The structure of the displacement interface was visualized for the critical velocity ratio (V/Vc) in the range of 0.5–11.9. In the conditionally stable configurations 3 and 4, a crossover between stable and unstable displacements was observed. We found that Dumore's stability criterion is more appropriate for predicting interface stability than Hill's stability criterion. Viscous fingering occurs in configuration 3 when V/Vc is higher than Dumore's critical velocity, whereas gravity fingering occurs in configuration 4 when V/Vc is lower than Dumore's critical velocity. Similar events in two-dimensional experiments, such as tip-splitting, shielding, and coalescence, were also observed three-dimensionally. The significant changes in the mixing length and sweep efficiency signify the crossover between the stable and unstable displacements.
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