4.5 Article

Numerical modeling of drying from saturated to unsaturated conditions with two-phase partitioning boundaries at the medium surface and interface-dependent phase change

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTIPHASE FLOW
Volume 171, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmultiphaseflow.2023.104671

Keywords

Drying; Two-phase partitioning boundary; Liquid water evaporation; Water vapor transport; Interface -dependent phase change

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This paper proposes a new two-phase partitioning boundary model to accurately predict the drying process of a porous medium from saturated to unsaturated conditions. The model is validated through laboratory soil drying tests and the study also investigates the effects of air-water interfacial area and water retention parameters on the drying process.
To accurately predict the drying of a porous medium from saturated to unsaturated conditions over time, this paper proposes two-phase partitioning boundaries for liquid water evaporation and water vapor transport at the medium surface. A non-isothermal two-phase (liquid water and gas mixtures), two-component (dry air and water vapor) transport model with nonequilibrium and interface-dependent phase change is then developed. The governing equations are then numerical solved using COMSOL Multiphysics software and applied to describe a series of laboratory soil drying tests as examples. The performance of the proposed boundaries at the surface is illustrated by comparison with other three common used boundaries. The results show that a specific flux of vapor at the surface with a zero flux of liquid water cannot be adopted to describe the drying process of initially saturated media due to the lack of interconnected gas-filled pores. The merged liquid-vapor boundary applied in the Darcy-Richards model significantly prolongs the constant rate stage when the liquid water evaporation is dominant. Then, the effects of air/gas-water interfacial area and water retention parameters on the drying process are investigated. A faster reduction in the air-water relative interfacial area at the medium surface will shorten the drying process with earlier dominance of the vapor transport. An increased entry capillary pressure and a decreased pore size distribution index for the water retention curve will result in slower drying, more loss by vapor transport and a more homogeneous distribution of pore water respect to depth. The current study can promote the understanding of the evolution of drying mechanisms of a porous medium from saturated to unsaturated conditions.

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