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DALIAN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY Login 中文
Yongchen Song

Professor
Supervisor of Doctorate Candidates
Supervisor of Master's Candidates


Gender:Male
Alma Mater:大连理工大学
Degree:Doctoral Degree
School/Department:能源与动力学院
Discipline:Energy and Environmental Engineering
Business Address:能动大楼810
Contact Information:songyc@dlut.edu.cn
E-Mail:songyc@dlut.edu.cn
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Current position: Home >> Scientific Research >> Paper Publications

In Situ Local Contact Angle Measurement in a CO2-Brine-Sand System Using Microfocused X-ray CT

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Indexed by:期刊论文

Date of Publication:2017-04-11

Journal:LANGMUIR

Included Journals:SCIE、EI、PubMed

Volume:33

Issue:14

Page Number:3358-3366

ISSN No.:0743-7463

Abstract:The wettability of porous media is of major interest in a broad range of natural and engineering applications. The wettability of a fluid on a solid surface is usually evaluated by the contact angle between them. While in situ local contact angle measurements are complicated by the topology of porous media, which can make it difficult to use traditional methods, recent advances in microfocused X-ray computed tomography (micro-CT) and image processing techniques have made it possible to measure contact angles on the scale of the pore sizes in such media. However, the effects of ionic strength, CO2 phase, and flow pattern (drainage or imbibition) on pore-scale contact angle distribution are still not clear and have not been reported in detail in previous studies. In this study, we employed a micro-CT scanner for in situ investigation of local contact angles in a CO2 brine sand system under various conditions. The effects of ionic strength, CO2 phase, and flow pattern on the local contact-angle distribution were examined in detail. The results showed that the local contact angles vary over a wide range as a result of the interaction of surface contaminants, roughness, pore topology, and capillarity. The wettability of a porous surface could thus slowly weaken with increasing ionic strength, and the average contact angle could significantly increase when gaseous CO2 (gCO(2)) turns into supercritical CO2 (scCO(2)). Contact angle hysteresis also occurred between drainage and imbibition procedures, and the hysteresis was more significant under gCO(2) condition.