A new approach to simulating flow in discrete fracture networks with an optimized mesh

  • Hussein Mustapha*
  • , Kassem Mustapha
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

75 Scopus citations

Abstract

Natural fractured media are highly unpredictable because of existing complex structures at the fracture and at the network levels. Fractures are by themselves heterogeneous objects of broadly distributed sizes, shapes, and orientations that are interconnected in large correlated networks. With little field data and evidence, numerical modeling can provide important information on the underground hydraulic phenomena. However, it must overcome several barriers. First, the complex network structure produces a structure difficult to mesh. Second, the absence of a priori homogenization scale, along with the double fracture and network heterogeneity levels, requires the calculation of large but finely resolved fracture networks resulting in very large simulation domains. To tackle these two related issues, we reduce the highly complex geometry of the fractures by applying a local transformation that suppresses the cumbersome meshing configurations while keeping the networks fundamental, geological, and geometrical characteristics. We show that the flow properties are marginally affected while the problem complexity (i.e., memory capacity and resolution time) can be divided by orders of magnitude. The goal of this article is to propose a method of resolution which takes into account the geometrical complexity met in the networks and which makes it possible to treat a few thousand fractures. The principal aim of this article is to present a tool to slowly modify the structures of the fracture networks to have a good quality mesh with a marginal loss in precision.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1439-1459
Number of pages21
JournalSIAM Journal on Scientific Computing
Volume29
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2007

Keywords

  • Darcy flow
  • Fractured medium
  • Mixed hybrid finite element method
  • Projection method
  • Stochastic discrete fracture network

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Computational Mathematics
  • Applied Mathematics

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