| Authors |
Saikat Mazumder, SPE, Shell Exploration and Production, and Fred Vermolen,
SPE, and Johannes Bruining, SPE, Delft University of Technology
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| Preview |
Summary
This paper gives an analysis of the Thomas and Windle model (Thomas and
Windle 1982) to determine its usefulness for describing anomalous diffusion of
CO2 in coal and its relation to matrix swelling. In addition, a
finite-element description for this model is derived. For reasons of easy
reference, a shortened derivation of the Thomas and Windle model is presented,
which was originally derived to describe diffusion in polymers. proposed by Hui
et al. (1987a, 1987b). Because the cumulative sorption showed t
α behavior with α > 0.5, the behavior was described
as enhanced diffusion or even superdiffusion. Analysis of the model equation
shows no evidence for superdiffusion even if non-Fickian behavior is observed
[i.e., there is (1) an initial phase in which the coal surface gets saturated
with a slope > 0.5 in a log-log plot of cumulative sorption vs. time, (2)
an intermediate phase that shows the typical square-root-of-time behavior of an
ordinary diffusion process, and (3) a final phase with a slope < 0.5 toward
equilibrium]. The cumulative mass is for all times less than what would have
been obtained for pure diffusion in a particle characterized by a rubber
diffusion coefficient. The slow saturation at the surface masks a process where
fast stress-induced diffusion dominates, which indeed can be faster than
Fickian. The cumulative sorption rates give behavior similar to the Rückenstein
model (Rückenstein et al. 1971), but the advantage of the Thomas and Windle
model is that it can also calculate the resulting coal-swelling effects.
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