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Flow in porous media, phase and ultralow interfacial tensions: Mechanisms of enhanced petroleum recovery

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A major program of university research, longer-ranged and more fundamental in approach than industrial research, into basic mechanisms of enhancing petroleum recovery and into underlying physics, chemistry, geology, applied mathematics, computation, and engineering science has been built at Minnesota. The original focus was surfactant-based chemical flooding, but the approach taken was sufficiently fundamental that the research, longer-ranged than industrial efforts, has become quite multidirectional. Topics discussed are volume controlled porosimetry; fluid distribution and transport in porous media at low wetting phase saturation; molecular dynamics of fluids in ultranarrow pores; molecular dynamics and molecular theory of wetting and adsorption; new numerical methods to handle initial and boundary conditions in immiscible displacement; electron microscopy of surfactant fluid microstructure; low cost system for animating liquid crystallites viewed with polarized light; surfaces of constant mean curvature with prescribed contact angle.

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Last Updated September 29, 2016, 15:53 (LMT)
Created September 29, 2016, 15:53 (LMT)
Citation Davis, H.T. Scriven, L.E. ---- Roy Long, Flow in porous media, phase and ultralow interfacial tensions: Mechanisms of enhanced petroleum recovery, 2016-09-29, https://edx.netl.doe.gov/dataset/flow-in-porous-media-phase-and-ultralow-interfacial-tensions-mechanisms-of-enhanced-petroleum-rec
Netl Product yes
Poc Email Roy.long@netl.doe.gov
Point Of Contact Roy Long
Program Or Project KMD
Publication Date 1991-7-1