Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In a quasi-1D domain, the Buckley–Leverett equation is given by: + (()) =, where (,) is the wetting-phase (water) saturation, is the total flow rate, is the rock porosity, is the area of the cross-section in the sample volume, and () is the fractional flow function of the wetting phase.
Without FD models, recovery estimates and oil rates can also be calculated using numerous analytical techniques which include material balance equations (including Havlena–Odeh and Tarner method), fractional flow curve methods (such as the Buckley–Leverett one-dimensional displacement method, the Deitz method for inclined structures, or coning models), and sweep efficiency estimation ...
This page was last edited on 10 January 2024, at 21:39 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Over 17,000 pounds of DJ’s Original Boudain sausage links, fresh and frozen, were recalled in three states due to potential foreign matter contamination.
Buckley–Leverett equation; Camassa–Holm equation; Chaplygin's equation; Continuity equation for conservation laws; Convection–diffusion equation. Double diffusive convection; Davey–Stewartson equation; Euler–Tricomi equation; Falkner–Skan boundary layer; Gardner equation in hydrodynamics; General equation of heat transfer ...
Another factor could be the wind’s direction, which can vary rapidly in both space and time depending on the weather, topography and air temperature, among other variables, said Coen, who works ...
The 10% additional tariff on imported Chinese goods came into force at 12:01 a.m., hours after the leaders of Mexico and Canada were able to negotiate a 30-day pause on the implementation of ...
In petroleum engineering, the Leverett J-function is a dimensionless function of water saturation describing the capillary pressure, [1] = / where is the water saturation measured as a fraction, is the capillary pressure (in pascal), is the permeability (measured in m²), is the porosity (0-1), is the surface tension (in N/m) and is the contact angle.