Article, 2024

Pressure-stabilized fixed-stress iterative solutions of compositional poromechanics

Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering, ISSN 1879-2138, 0045-7825, Volume 427, Page 117008, 10.1016/j.cma.2024.117008

Contributors

Aronson, Ryan M 0009-0004-0785-5084 (Corresponding author) [1] Castelletto, Nicola [2] Hamon, François P 0000-0001-8229-963X [3] White, Joshua A [2] Tchelepi, Hamdi A 0000-0002-3084-6635 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Stanford University
  2. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  3. [2] Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  4. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD];
  5. [3] TotalEnergies (Denmark)
  6. [NORA names: Other Companies; Private Research; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

We consider the numerical behavior of the fixed-stress splitting method for coupled poromechanics as undrained regimes are approached. We explain that pressure stability is related to the splitting error of the scheme, not the fact that the discrete saddle point matrix never appears in the fixed-stress approach. This observation reconciles previous results regarding the pressure stability of the splitting method. Using examples of compositional poromechanics with application to geological CO 2 sequestration, we see that solutions obtained using the fixed-stress scheme with a low order finite element-finite volume discretization which is not inherently inf-sup stable can exhibit the same pressure oscillations obtained with the corresponding fully implicit scheme. Moreover, pressure jump stabilization can effectively remove these spurious oscillations in the fixed-stress setting, while also improving the efficiency of the scheme in terms of the number of iterations required at every time step to reach convergence.

Keywords

CO 2 sequestration, approach, behavior, convergence, coupled poromechanics, discretization, efficiency, error, fixed-stress, fixed-stress schemes, fixed-stress split method, geological CO 2 sequestration, implicit, implicit scheme, iteration, iterative solution, jumping stability, matrix, method, numerical behavior, observations, oscillations, point matrix, poromechanics, pressure, pressure oscillations, pressure stability, regime, saddle point matrix, scheme, sets, solution, splitting, splitting error, splitting method, stability, undrained regimes, volume discretization

Funders

  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Chevron (United States)

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