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  • 1
    Unknown
    Amsterdam : North-Holland Pub. Co
    Keywords: DDC 510/.01 ; LC QA9
    Pages: Online-Ressource (vii, 122 pages)
    ISBN: 9780444703583
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Unknown
    Amsterdam : North-Holland Pub. Co
    Keywords: DDC 510/.01 ; LC QA9
    Pages: Online-Ressource (x, 79 pages)
    ISBN: 9780444533661
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Unknown
    Amsterdam : North-Holland Pub. Co
    Keywords: DDC 510/.01 ; LC QA9
    Pages: Online-Ressource (vi, 195 pages)
    ISBN: 9780444533692
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Unknown
    Amsterdam : North-Holland Pub. Co
    Keywords: DDC 510/.01 ; LC QA9
    Pages: Online-Ressource (vi, 90 pages)
    ISBN: 9780444533708
    Language: English
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  • 5
    Unknown
    Amsterdam : North-Holland Pub. Co
    Keywords: DDC 510/.01 ; LC QA9
    Pages: Online-Ressource (vii, 75 pages)
    ISBN: 9780444533685
    Language: English
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2022-06-26
    Description: Efficient compositional models are required to simulate underground gas storage in porous formations where, for example, gas quality (such as purity) and loss of gas due to dissolution are of interest. We first extend the concept of vertical equilibrium (VE) to compositional flow, and derive a compositional VE model by vertical integration. Second, we present a hybrid model that couples the efficient compositional VE model to a compositional full‐dimensional model. Subdomains, where the compositional VE model is valid, are identified during simulation based on a VE criterion that compares the vertical profiles of relative permeability at equilibrium to the ones simulated by the full‐dimensional model. We demonstrate the applicability of the hybrid model by simulating hydrogen storage in a radially symmetric, heterogeneous porous aquifer. The hybrid model shows excellent adaptivity over space and time for different permeability values in the heterogeneous region, and compares well to the full‐dimensional model while being computationally efficient, resulting in a runtime of roughly one‐third of the full‐dimensional model. Based on the results, we assume that for larger simulation scales, the efficiency of this new model will increase even more.
    Description: Key Points: A compositional vertical equilibrium model is coupled to its full‐dimensional counterpart. A criterion is developed to adaptively identify and assign regions where the vertical equilibrium model is applicable during simulation. A test case of hydrogen storage in a heterogeneous porous aquifer demonstrates efficiency and accuracy of the hybrid model.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: https://git.iws.uni-stuttgart.de/dumux-pub/Becker2021b.git
    Keywords: ddc:551.49 ; ddc:550
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2022-06-22
    Description: Basal melting of marine‐terminating glaciers, through its impact on the forces that control the flow of the glaciers, is one of the major factors determining sea level rise in a world of global warming. Detailed quantitative understanding of dynamic and thermodynamic processes in melt‐water plumes underneath the ice‐ocean interface is essential for calculating the subglacial melt rate. The aim of this study is therefore to develop a numerical model of high spatial and process resolution to consistently reproduce the transports of heat and salt from the ambient water across the plume into the glacial ice. Based on boundary layer relations for momentum and tracers, stationary analytical solutions for the vertical structure of subglacial non‐rotational plumes are derived, including entrainment at the plume base. These solutions are used to develop and test convergent numerical formulations for the momentum and tracer fluxes across the ice‐ocean interface. After implementation of these formulations into a water‐column model coupled to a second‐moment turbulence closure model, simulations of a transient rotational subglacial plume are performed. The simulated entrainment rate of ambient water entering the plume at its base is compared to existing entrainment parameterizations based on bulk properties of the plume. A sensitivity study with variations of interfacial slope, interfacial roughness and ambient water temperature reveals substantial performance differences between these bulk formulations. An existing entrainment parameterization based on the Froude number and the Ekman number proves to have the highest predictive skill. Recalibration to subglacial plumes using a variable drag coefficient further improves its performance.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: In a world of global warming, the melting of glaciers terminating as floating ice tongues into the oceans of Arctic and Antarctic regions allows those glaciers to flow faster and hence to make a considerable contribution to global mean sea‐level rise. Underneath the ice‐ocean interface, turbulent currents of the order of 10 m thickness (so‐called plumes) develop that transport the melt water from the grounding line where the glacier enters the ocean toward the calving front that marks the seaward end of the glacier. At its base, ambient relatively warm and salty ocean water is mixed into the plumes and is vertically transported toward the ice‐ocean interface, where the melting is increased due to the additional heat supply. Understanding these processes is essential for their incorporation into computer models for the prediction of such melt processes. In this study, an accurate simulation model for the water column is constructed that is able to consistently reproduce these processes. The algorithms developed here are proven to provide reliable results also for models with only a few grid points across the plume and can therefore be implemented into climate models with surface‐following coordinates to more accurately simulate future scenarios of sea level rise.
    Description: Key Points: A vertically resolving model with second‐moment turbulence closure has been constructed for subglacial plumes. Convergent numerical formulations for the ocean‐to‐ice fluxes of momentum, freshwater and heat have been derived from an analytical model. Model results are consistent with bulk parameterizations for the entrainment of ambient water.
    Description: Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100002347
    Description: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6203838
    Keywords: ddc:550
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2022-10-17
    Description: Hydrogen is a promising alternative to carbon based energy carriers and may be stored in large quantities in subsurface storage deposits. This work assesses the impact of static (density and phase equilibria) and dynamic (viscosity and diffusion coefficients) properties on the pressure field during the injection and extraction of hydrogen in the porous subsurface. In a first step, we derive transport properties for water, hydrogen and their mixture using the Perturbed‐Chain Statistical Associating Fluid Theory equation of state in combination with an entropy scaling approach and compare model predictions to alternative models from the literature. Our model compares excellently to experimental transport coefficients and models from literature with a higher number of adjustable parameters, such as GERG2008, and shows a clear improvement over empirical correlations for transport coefficients of hydrogen. In a second step, we determine the effect of further model reduction by comparing our against a much simpler model applying empirical transport coefficients from the literature. For this purpose, hydrogen is periodically injected into and extracted out of a dome‐shaped porous aquifer under a caprock. Our results show that density and viscosity of hydrogen have the highest impact on the pressure field, and that a thermodynamic model like the new model presented here is essential for modeling the storage aquifer, while keeping the number of coefficients at a minimum. In diffusion‐dominated settings such as the diffusion of hydrogen through the caprock, our developed diffusion coefficients show a much improved dependence on temperature and pressure, leading to a more accurate approximation of the diffusive fluxes.
    Description: Key Points: We model the phase behavior of pure hydrogen and the binary hydrogen‐water mixture using the Perturbed‐Chain Statistical Associating Fluid Theory equation of state. New entropy scaling relations for the transport properties of hydrogen and water and diffusion coefficients of their mixture are derived. The impact of the newly derived fluid properties is analyzed for a scenario of hydrogen storage in a porous aquifer.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: https://git.iws.uni-stuttgart.de/dumux-pub/sauerborn2020a
    Keywords: ddc:550
    Language: English
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2022-10-18
    Description: Large‐scale groundwater models are required to estimate groundwater availability and to inform water management strategies on the national scale. However, parameterization of large‐scale groundwater models covering areas of major river basins and more is challenging due to the lack of observational data and the mismatch between the scales of modeling and measurements. In this work, we propose to bridge the scale gap and derive regional hydraulic parameters by spectral analysis of groundwater level fluctuations. We hypothesize that specific locations in aquifers can reveal regional parameters of the hydraulic system. We first generate ensembles of synthetic but realistic aquifers which systematically differ in complexity. Applying Liang and Zhang’s (2013), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2012.11.044, semi‐analytical solution for the spectrum of hydraulic head time series, we identify for each ensemble member and at different locations representative aquifer parameters. Next, we extend our study to investigate the use of spectral analysis in more complex numerical models and in real settings. Our analyses indicate that the variance of inferred effective transmissivity and storativity values for stochastic aquifer ensembles is small for observation points which are far away from the Dirichlet boundary. Moreover, the head time series has to cover a period which is roughly 10 times as long as the characteristic time of the aquifer. In deterministic aquifer models we infer equivalent, regionally valid parameters. A sensitivity analysis further reveals that as long as the aquifer length and the position of the groundwater measurement location is roughly known, the parameters can be robustly estimated.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: We build large‐scale (regional) computer models of the subsurface flow conditions in order to quantify the long‐term shift in groundwater storage and response on the national level under changing climatic conditions and increasing human water demands. These models must be fed with hydrogeological parameters obtained from subsurface observation wells, drilling logs, and hydraulic tests in conjunction with (hydro)geological and geostatistical methods. In some regions these wells are sparsely distributed and derived parameters are representative only for small areas. We hypothesize that groundwater level records can reveal regional aquifer information when analyzed in the spectral domain. In order to bridge that scale gap and because groundwater level time series are generally available, we propose to infer regional parameters by analyzing the frequency content (spectrum) of long groundwater level time series. The required parameters were determined using mathematical formulations of the theoretical spectrum for simplified settings. We tested the methodology in computer models with limited complexity and found that the groundwater level time series indeed contain regional information if the time of observation is sufficiently long. Lastly, we apply the spectral analysis to real groundwater data to test the capability of the method to infer regional aquifer parameters in real aquifers.
    Description: Key Points: We successfully tested the spectral analysis of groundwater level fluctuations in numerical models and obtained regional aquifer parameters. In a sensitivity analysis of the spectral analysis using field data, the storativity and the response times could be robustly estimated. The application of the suggested methodology to the field data from a catchment in central Germany produced plausible results.
    Description: Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ)
    Description: Global Resource Water
    Description: German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
    Description: IDAEA‐CSIC
    Description: Barcelona City Council
    Description: https://github.com/ufz/ogs5
    Description: https://geostat-framework.github.io/
    Keywords: ddc:551.49
    Language: English
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-08-05
    Description: Vlasov solvers that operate on a phase‐space grid are highly accurate but also numerically demanding. Coarse velocity space resolutions, which are largely unproblematic in particle‐in‐cell (PIC) simulations, can lead to numerical heating or oscillations in continuum Vlasov methods. To address this issue, we present a new dual Vlasov solver which is based on an established positivity preserving advection scheme for the update of the distribution function and an energy conserving partial differential equation solver for the kinetic update of mean velocity and temperature. The solvers work together via moment fitting during which the maximum entropy part of the distribution function is replaced by the solution from the partial differential equation solver. This numerical scheme makes continuum Vlasov methods competitive with PIC methods concerning computational cost and enables us to model large scale reconnection in Earth's magnetosphere with a fully kinetic continuum method. The simulation results agree well with measurements by the MMS spacecraft.
    Description: Key Points: A moment fitting continuum Vlasov solver is presented that preserves positivity of the distribution function and conserves total energy. The method behaves well at low velocity space resolutions, making it competitive with PIC methods concerning computational cost. There is good agreement of the simulations with measurements of magnetic reconnection by the MMS spacecraft.
    Description: Helmholtz Association (亥姆霍兹联合会致力) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100009318
    Description: https://vlasov.tp1.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/data/paper-JGR-2021
    Keywords: ddc:550 ; ddc:538.7
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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