https://doi.org/10.1140/epje/s10189-021-00112-y
Regular Article - Flowing Matter
Similarity solutions for early-time constant boundary flux imbibition in foams and soils
1
Department of Chemical and Process Engineering, University of Strathclyde, James Weir Building, 75 Montrose Street, G1 1XJ, Glasgow, UK
2
Department of Energy and Petroleum Engineering, University of Energy and Natural Resources, Sunyani, Ghana
a
yaw.boakye-ansah@strath.ac.uk
Received:
30
March
2021
Accepted:
15
August
2021
Published online:
31
August
2021
The foam drainage equation and Richards equation are transport equations for foams and soils, respectively. Each reduces to a nonlinear diffusion equation in the early stage of infiltration during which time, flow is predominantly capillary driven, hence is effectively capillary imbibition. Indeed such equations arise quite generally during imbibition processes in porous media. New early-time solutions based on the van Genuchten relative diffusivity function for soils are found and compared with the same for drainage in foams. The moisture profiles which develop when delivering a known flux into these various porous materials are sought. Solutions are found using the principle of self-similarity. Singular profiles that terminate abruptly are obtained for soils, a contrast with solutions obtained for node-dominated foam drainage which are known from the literature (the governing equation being now linear is analogous to the linear equation for heat transfer). As time evolves, the moisture that develops at the top boundary when a known flux is delivered is greater in soils than in foams and is greater still in loamy soils than in sandstones. Similarities and differences between the various solutions for nonlinear and linear diffusion are highlighted.
© The Author(s) 2021
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