“…Different flow regimes, e.g., droplet, rivulet, and film flow, can coexist even in controlled settings and are difficult to cast into unified conceptual frameworks (Ghezzehei, 2004). In well-controlled analog percolation experiments, the fracture-specific formation of flow modes and instabilities (Jones et al, 2018;Li et al, 2018) and the role of unsaturated fracture intersections on partitioning behavior has been investigated (e.g., Ji et al, 2006;Kordilla et al, 2017;LaViolette et al, 2003;Nicholl and Glass, 2005;Wood et al, 2002Wood et al, , 2005Wood and Huang, 2015), where the applied flow rate controls the stability of a desired flow regime (Towell and Rothfeld, 1966;Schmuki and Laso, 1990). These studies emphasize the importance of fracture intersections as capillary barriers (until steady-state conditions are established), which may induce pulsating flows and act as important integrators for dispersion and recharge processes.…”