2011
DOI: 10.1007/s11242-011-9851-5
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Negative Saturation Approach for Non-Isothermal Compositional Two-Phase Flow Simulations

Abstract: This article deals with developing a solution approach, called the non-isothermal negative saturation (NegSat) solution approach. The NegSat solution approach solves efficiently any non-isothermal compositional flow problem that involves phase disappearance, phase appearance, and phase transition. The advantage of the solution approach is that it circumvents using different equations for single-phase and two-phase regions and the ensuing unstable procedure. This paper shows that the NegSat solution approach ca… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…It can only change Φ i for a given P, T, and c tðjÞ . Since the number of phases np is not changed, the reported saturations s i and concentrations c iðjÞ and c tðjÞ are allowed to take negative or larger-than-one values [19]. If Mode = 1, then the initial guess is not specified.…”
Section: Subroutines Exported From Usereosmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It can only change Φ i for a given P, T, and c tðjÞ . Since the number of phases np is not changed, the reported saturations s i and concentrations c iðjÞ and c tðjÞ are allowed to take negative or larger-than-one values [19]. If Mode = 1, then the initial guess is not specified.…”
Section: Subroutines Exported From Usereosmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The saturation distribution is governed by the Buckley-Leverett solution [22]. This analytical solution consists of the leading displacement front S, at which s 1 is discontinuous, and the trailing Riemann wave, in which s 1 changes continuously, reaching s 1 = 1 at X = 0 m. One can show that for Equation (19) and specified phase viscosities μ 1 and μ 2 , the shock propagates at a velocity of 0.8 m/day. Thus, S is exactly at X = 80 m at t = 100 days.…”
Section: 2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To handle this, Abadpour and Panfilov (2009) proposed the negative saturation method, in which saturation values less than zero and bigger than one are used to store extra information of the phase transition. Salimi et al (2012) later extended this method to the non-isothermal condition, and also taking into account the diffusion and capillary forces. By their efforts, the primary variable switching has been successfully avoided.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another strategy to avoid the switch of variables is based on the extension of some physical quantities such as the phase molar fractions like in [23] using component fugacities, or the phase molar fractions and pressures like in [3,28]. Let us also mention the negative saturation formulations [1,37] belonging to this family. A comparison between some of these formulations can be found in [41,28] in the case of isothermal compositional Darcy flows.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%