Pretty Porous Science Lecture #2 "Porous Media, Small and Large: From Atomistic Modeling of Nano-porous Membranes to Modeling of Flow and Transport in Geological Formations" by Muhammad Sahimi

February 23, 2021 /

The SFB 1313 "Pretty Porous Science Lectures" will take place in the framework of the InterPore Kimberly-Clark Distinguished Lecture 2021.
[Picture: Prof. Muhammad Sahimi]

We are pleased to announce that Muhammad Sahimi, professor at University of Southern California, Los Angeles (USA), and holder of the InterPore Kimberly-Clark Distinguished Lectureship 2021, will give the next SFB 1313 "Pretty Porous Science Lecture". His talk will be on "Porous Media, Small and Large: From Atomistic Modeling of Nano-porous Membranes to Modeling of Flow and Transport in Geological Formations".

Date: Tuesday, 23 February 2021
Time: 5:00 pm CET
Speaker: Prof. Muhammad Sahimi, University of Southern California, Los Angeles (USA)
Lecture title: "Porous Media, Small and Large: From Atomistic Modeling of Nano-porous Membranes to Modeling of Flow and Transport in Geological Formations"
Place: If you are interested in participating in the lecture, please contact katharina.heck@iws.uni-stuttgart.de

Abstract

Flow, transport, reaction, adsorption and deformation (FTRAD) constitute a fascinating set of phenomena that occur in a wide variety of porous media and materials over widely disparate length scales, from molecular, to pore, core, and field scales. In this presentation four classes of fundamental problems are described and the approaches to their modeling are discussed. We first describe a process-based modeling of fabrication of a nano-porous membrane based on quantum mechanical calculations and molecular dynamics simulations. We then outline a general approach to modeling of adsorption and swelling of several types of core-scale porous materials. Next, the problem of reconstruction of porous materials and media based on limited data, such as their two- or three-dimensional images is described, and a new method based on curvelet transforms for speeding up simulation of the FTRAD in such images is discussed. Finally, the problem of upscaling from core to field scale is described and a multiresolution approach to the problem based on wavelet transformations is discussed.

About Muhammad Sahimi

Muhammad Sahimi is Professor of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, and the NIOC Chair in Petroleum Engineering at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. He received his B.S. degree from the University of Tehran in 1977 and his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1984, both in chemical engineering. He joined USC in 1984, and was the Chair of his Department from 1999-2005. His research interests include flow, transport, reaction, adsorption and deformation in porous media, characterization of fracture network of rock, transport of fluid mixtures in membranes, and transport of fluids and macromolecules in nanostructured materials. He has published over 400 papers and 4 books, and has received several teaching and research awards, including the Interpore’s Honorary Member Award for Lifetime Achievements.

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