Direct observations of solute dispersion in rocks with distinct degree
of sub-micron porosity
Abstract
The transport of chemical species in rocks is affected by their
structural heterogeneity to yield a wide spectrum of local solute
concentrations. To quantify such imperfect mixing, advanced
methodologies are needed that augment the traditional breakthrough curve
analysis by probing solute concentration within the fluids locally.
Here, we demonstrate the application of asynchronous, multimodality
imaging by X-ray computed tomography (XCT) and positron emission
tomography (PET) to the study of passive tracer experiments in
laboratory rock cores. The four-dimensional concentration maps measured
by PET reveal specific signatures of the transport process, which we
have quantified using fundamental measures of mixing and spreading. We
observe that the extent of solute spreading correlate strongly with the
strength of subcore-scale porosity heterogeneity measured by XCT, while
dilution is enhanced in rocks containing substantial sub-micron
porosity. We observe that the analysis of different metrics is
necessary, as they can differ in their sensitivity to the strength and
forms of heterogeneity. The multimodality imaging approach is uniquely
suited to probe the fundamental difference between spreading and mixing
in heterogeneous media. We propose that when multi-dimensional data is
available, mixing and spreading can be independently quantified using
the same metric. We also demonstrate that one-dimensional transport
models have limited predictive ability towards the internal evolution of
the solute concentration, when the model is solely calibrated against
the effluent breakthrough curves. The dataset generated in this study
can be used to build realistic digital rock models and to benchmark
transport simulations that account deterministically for rock property
heterogeneity.