Tycho van Noorden
COMSOL Employee
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Posted:
6 years ago
Mar 7, 2019, 4:17 a.m. EST
Dear Swati Gupta,
If you use the Multiphase Flow in Porous Media multiphysics interface, which couples a Darcy's Law interface and a Phase Transport in Porous Media interface, the Darcy's Law interface indeed computes for the pressure of only one phase. However, from this pressure of one phase, the Phase Transport in Porous Media interface computes the pressures of both phases, using a capillary pressure function. From these two pressures, the velocities for both phases are then computed. These pressures are usually called phtr.p_s1 and phtr.p_s2, and the velocities are usually called (phtr.ux_s1,phtr.uy_s1,phtr.uz_s1) and (phtr.ux_s2,phtr.uy_s2,phtr.uz_s2). These variables can be used for plotting and are available in the plot menu. More details can be found in the Subsurface Flow Module User's Guide.
Another approach for two-phase flow in a porous medium, can be found in the following example model:
https://www.comsol.nl/model/two-phase-flow-experiment-499
where two Darcy's Law interface are used.
In principle the two approaches (two Darcy's Law interfaces or the Multiphase Flow in Porous Media multiphysics interface) should give the same results.
Best regards, Tycho van Noorden, COMSOL
Dear Swati Gupta,
If you use the Multiphase Flow in Porous Media multiphysics interface, which couples a Darcy's Law interface and a Phase Transport in Porous Media interface, the Darcy's Law interface indeed computes for the pressure of only one phase. However, from this pressure of one phase, the Phase Transport in Porous Media interface computes the pressures of both phases, using a capillary pressure function. From these two pressures, the velocities for both phases are then computed. These pressures are usually called phtr.p_s1 and phtr.p_s2, and the velocities are usually called (phtr.ux_s1,phtr.uy_s1,phtr.uz_s1) and (phtr.ux_s2,phtr.uy_s2,phtr.uz_s2). These variables can be used for plotting and are available in the plot menu. More details can be found in the *Subsurface Flow Module User's Guide*.
Another approach for two-phase flow in a porous medium, can be found in the following example model:
[https://www.comsol.nl/model/two-phase-flow-experiment-499](https://www.comsol.nl/model/two-phase-flow-experiment-499)
where two Darcy's Law interface are used.
In principle the two approaches (two Darcy's Law interfaces or the Multiphase Flow in Porous Media multiphysics interface) should give the same results.
Best regards, Tycho van Noorden, COMSOL