Quantitative properties of complex porous materials calculated from X-ray μCT images
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Sheppard, Adrian
Arns, Christoph H.
Sakellariou, Arthur
Senden, Tim J.
Sok, Rob M.
Averdunk, Holger
Saadatfar, Mohammad
Limaye, Ajay
Knackstedt, Mark A.
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Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Abstract
A microcomputed tomography (μCT) facility and computational infrastructure developed at the Department of Applied
Mathematics at the Australian National University is described. The current experimental facility is capable of acquiring
3D images made up of 20003 voxels on porous specimens up to 60 mm diameter with resolutions down to 2 μm. This
allows the three-dimensional (3D) pore-space of porous specimens to be imaged over several orders of magnitude. The
computational infrastructure includes the establishment of optimised and distributed memory parallel algorithms for image
reconstruction, novel phase identification, 3D visualisation, structural characterisation and prediction of mechanical and
transport properties directly from digitised tomographic images.
To date over 300 porous specimens exhibiting a wide variety of microstructure have been imaged and analysed. In this
paper, analysis of a small set of porous rock specimens with structure ranging from unconsolidated sands to complex carbonates
are illustrated. Computations made directly on the digitised tomographic images have been compared to laboratory
measurements. The results are in excellent agreement. Additionally, local flow, diffusive and mechanical properties can
be numerically derived from solutions of the relevant physical equations on the complex geometries; an experimentally
intractable problem. Structural analysis of data sets includes grain and pore partitioning of the images. Local granular
partitioning yields over 70,000 grains from a single image. Conventional grain size, shape and connectivity parameters
are derived. The 3D organisation of grains can help in correlating grain size, shape and orientation to resultant physical
properties. Pore network models generated from 3D images yield over 100000 pores and 200000 throats; comparing the
pore structure for the different specimens illustrates the varied topology and geometry observed in porous rocks. This
development foreshadows a new numerical laboratory approach to the study of complex porous materials.
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Proceedings of SPIE - Progress in Biomedical Optics and Imaging 7, 38 (2006): 631811/1-15
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