Defining the Constitutive Response of Fluid within the Cohesive Element Gap
The cohesive element fluid flow model:
is typically used in geotechnical applications, where fluid flow
continuity within the gap and through the interface must be maintained;
enables fluid pressure on the cohesive element surface to contribute
to its mechanical behavior, which enables the modeling of hydraulically driven
fracture;
enables modeling of an additional resistance layer on the surface of
the cohesive element; and
can be used only in conjunction with traction-separation behavior.
The features described in this section are used to model fluid flow within
and across surfaces of pore pressure cohesive elements.
Tangential flow within the gap, which can be modeled with either a
Newtonian or power law model; and
Normal flow across the gap, which can reflect resistance due to caking
or fouling effects.
The flow patterns of the pore fluid in the element are shown in
Figure 1.
The fluid is assumed to be incompressible, and the formulation is based on a
statement of flow continuity that considers tangential and normal flow and the
rate of opening of the cohesive element.
Specifying the Fluid Flow Properties
You can assign tangential and normal flow properties separately.
Tangential Flow
By default, there is no tangential flow of pore fluid within the cohesive
element. To allow tangential flow, define a gap flow property in conjunction
with the pore fluid material definition.
Newtonian Fluid
In the case of a Newtonian fluid the volume flow rate density vector is
given by the expression
where
is the tangential permeability (the resistance to the fluid flow),
is the pressure gradient along the cohesive element, and
is the gap opening.
In
Abaqus
the gap opening, ,
is defined as
where
and
are the current and original cohesive element geometrical thicknesses,
respectively; and
is the initial gap opening, which has a default value of 0.002.
Abaqus
defines the tangential permeability, or the resistance to flow, according to
Reynold's equation:
where
is the fluid viscosity and
is the gap opening. You can also specify an upper limit on the value of
.
Power Law Fluid
In the case of a power law fluid the constitutive relation is defined as
where
is the shear stress,
is the shear strain rate,
is the fluid consistency, and
is the power law coefficient.
Abaqus
defines the tangential volume flow rate density as
where
is the gap opening.
Bingham Plastic Fluid
In the case of a Bingham plastic fluid the volume flow rate density vector is given by the
expression
where is the fluid consistency, is the yield stress, and is the gap opening. The unyielded fluid is modeled as a Newtonian
fluid with viscosity equal to , where has a default value of 107.
Herschel-Bulkley Fluid
In the case of a Herschel-Bulkley fluid the volume flow rate density vector is given by the
expression
where is the fluid consistency, is the power law coefficient, is the yield stress, and is the gap opening. The unyielded fluid is modeled as a Newtonian
fluid with viscosity equal to , where has a default value of 107.
Normal Flow across Gap Surfaces
You can permit normal flow by defining a fluid leak-off coefficient for the
pore fluid material. This coefficient defines a pressure-flow relationship
between the cohesive element's middle nodes and their adjacent surface nodes.
The fluid leak-off coefficients can be interpreted as the permeability of a
finite layer of material on the cohesive element surfaces, as shown in
Figure 2.
The normal flow is defined as
and
where
and
are the flow rates into the top and bottom surfaces, respectively;
is the midface pressure; and
and
are the pore pressures on the top and bottom surfaces, respectively.
Defining Leak-off Coefficients as a Function of Temperature and Field Variables
You can optionally define leak-off coefficients as functions of
temperature and field variables.
Defining Leak-off Coefficients in a User Subroutine
User subroutine
UFLUIDLEAKOFF can also be used to define more complex leak-off behavior,
including the ability to define a time accumulated resistance, or fouling,
through the use of solution-dependent state variables.
Tangential and Normal Flow Combinations
Table 1
shows the permitted combinations of tangential and normal flow and the effects
of each combination.
Table 1. Effects of flow property definition combinations.
Normal flow is defined
Normal flow is undefined
Tangential flow is defined
Tangential and normal flow are modeled.
Tangential flow is modeled. Pore pressure continuity is enforced
between facing nodes in the cohesive element only when the element is closed.
Otherwise, the surfaces are impermeable in the normal direction.
Tangential flow is undefined
Normal flow is modeled.
Tangential flow is not modeled. Pore pressure continuity is always
enforced between facing nodes in the cohesive element.
Initially Open Elements
When the opening of the cohesive element is driven primarily by entry of
fluid into the gap, you will have to define one or more elements as initially
open, since tangential flow is possible only in an open element. Identify
initially open elements as initial conditions.
Your use of cohesive element fluid properties and your property values can
impact your solution in some cases.
Large Coefficient Values
You must make sure that the tangential permeability or fluid leak-off
coefficients are not excessively large. If either coefficient is many orders of
magnitude higher than the permeability in the adjacent continuum elements,
matrix conditioning problems may occur, leading to solver singularities and
unreliable results.
Use in Total Pore Pressure Simulations
Definition of tangential flow properties may result in inaccurate results if
the total pore pressure formulation is used and the hydrostatic pressure
gradient contributes significantly to the tangential flow in the gap. The total
pore pressure formulation is invoked if you apply gravity distributed loads to
all elements in the model. The results will be accurate if the hydrostatic
pressure gradient (i.e., the gravity vector) is perpendicular to the cohesive
element.
Output
The following output variables are available when flow is enabled in pore
pressure cohesive elements:
GFVR
Gap fluid volume rate.
PFOPEN
Fracture opening.
LEAKVRT
Leak-off flow rate at element top.
ALEAKVRT
Accumulated leak-off flow volume at element top.
LEAKVRB
Leak-off flow rate at element bottom.
ALEAKVRB
Accumulated leak-off flow volume at element bottom.