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This chapter teaches you how to simulate incompressible, two-phase flow using a sequential formulation that splits the equation system into an elliptic pressure equation and a hyperbolic (or parabolic) saturation equation. We discuss fluid objects, the sequential solution procedure, and explicit and implicit transport solvers in some detail. The second part of the chapter is devoted to a number of simulation examples that highlight typical flow behavior. Examples include gravity segregation, homogeneous quarter five-spots, heterogeneous quarter five-spots with viscous fingering, and buoyant migration of CO2 in a sloping aquifer. Furthermore, we discuss water coning, gravity override, capillary fringes, and a simplified simulation of the Norne field model. We end the chapter by a discussion of various sources of numerical errors, including splitting and grid-orientation errors.
The two-point flux-approximation (TPFA) scheme is robust in the sense that it generally gives a linear system that has a solution regardless of the variations in K and the geometrical and topological complexity of the grid. The resulting solutions will also be monotone, but the scheme is only consistent for certain combinations of grids and permeability tensors K. This implies that a TPFA solution will not necessarily approach the true solution when we increase the grid resolution. It also means that the scheme may produce different solutions depending upon how the grid is oriented relative to the main flow directions. In this chapter, we first explain the lack of consistency for TPFA, before we introduce a few consistent schemes implemented in MRST, including the mimetic finite-difference method and one example of a multipoint flux approximation method (MPFA-O). These can all be written on a general mixed hybrid form, which is motivated by mixed finite-element methods. We explain how you can specify different methods that reduce to known methods on simple grids by adjusting the inner product in the mixed hybrid formulation.
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