4.6 Article

Effects of Topological Properties with Local Variable Apertures on Solute Transport through Three-Dimensional Discrete Fracture Networks

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr11113157

Keywords

fracture networks; aperture heterogeneity; fluid flow; solute transport; breakthrough curves

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This study investigates the effects of topological properties with local variable apertures on fluid flow and solute transport through 3D discrete fracture networks. A series of 3D DFNs with different fracture density, length, and aperture distribution were generated, and the fluid flow and solute transport were simulated. The results reveal the impact of network topology and aperture heterogeneity on fluid flow and transport processes.
In this study, the effects of topological properties with local variable apertures on fluid flow and solute transport through three-dimensional (3D) discrete fracture networks (DFNs) were investigated. A series of 3D DFNs with different fracture density, length, and aperture distribution were generated. The fluid flow and solute transport through the models were simulated by combining the MATLAB code and COMSOL Multiphysics. The effects of network topology and aperture heterogeneity on fluid flow and transport process were analyzed. The results show that the fluid flow and solute transport exhibit a strong channeling effect even in the DFNs with identical aperture, in which the areas of fast and slow migration fit well with the high- and low-flow regions, respectively. More obvious preferential paths of flow and migration are observed in individual fractures for the DFN with heterogeneous aperture than the model with identical aperture. Increasing the fracture length exponent reduces the available flow and transport paths for sparse fracture networks but does not significantly change the flow and transport channels for dense fracture networks. The breakthrough curves (BTCs) shift towards the right and slightly lag behind as the fracture density decreases or the aperture heterogeneity increases. The advection-diffusion equation (ADE) model cannot properly capture the evolution of BTCs for 3D DFNs, especially the long tails of BTCs. Compared to the ADE model, the mobile-immobile model (MIM) model separating the liquid phase into flowing and stagnate regions is proven to better fit the BTCs of 3D DFNs with heterogeneous aperture.

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