pith. sign in

arxiv: 2506.08152 · v1 · pith:BQRBIJ3Unew · submitted 2025-06-09 · 🧮 math.AP · math-ph· math.MP· physics.flu-dyn

The Riemann problem for three-phase foam flow in porous media

Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 00:09 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.AP math-phmath.MPphysics.flu-dyn
keywords foam flowporous mediaRiemann problemthree-phase flowconservation lawsenhanced oil recoveryoil bank formationnon-classical shocks
0
0 comments X

The pith

A methodology classifies all solutions to the Riemann problem for three-phase foam flow when gas viscosity exceeds that of oil and water.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

This paper develops a method to solve the Riemann problem for three-phase foam displacement in porous media under the condition that gas is more viscous than oil and water. The approach uses the assumption of local equilibrium to treat foam strength as fixed, which simplifies the model and permits a full classification of wave structures for injecting foamed gas and water mixtures across many initial conditions. The classification is carried out inside non-classical conservation law theory and includes identification of cases that produce an oil bank. Such results matter because they supply explicit predictions for foam-assisted recovery processes and supply exact benchmarks that numerical simulators can be checked against.

Core claim

The authors present a methodology to solve the Riemann problem for three-phase foam displacement in porous media in the case when gas viscosity exceeds that of oil and water. Assuming foam in local equilibrium with a constant mobility reduction factor, they classify possible solutions for the injection of foamed gas and water mixtures under a wide range of initial conditions within the framework of non-classical conservation law theory. The work also identifies the conditions that result in oil bank formation and validates the analytical estimates by numerical simulation.

What carries the argument

Classification of admissible wave structures for the three-phase foam system with constant mobility reduction factor inside non-classical conservation law theory.

If this is right

  • The classified solutions directly predict when an oil bank forms during foam injection.
  • Analytical wave structures supply reference data for calibrating numerical simulators of foam flow.
  • The results enable uncertainty quantification for recovery forecasts in applications that use foam.
  • The classification advances the physical description of how foam controls gas mobility in porous rock.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same classification approach could be tested on models that allow foam texture to evolve with time rather than stay fixed.
  • Wave-structure results may guide the choice of injection rates that maximize oil-bank size in field-scale planning.
  • Analogous Riemann-problem techniques could be applied to other multiphase systems that rely on mobility-control additives.

Load-bearing premise

The analysis rests on the assumption that foam remains in local equilibrium, which keeps the mobility reduction factor constant everywhere.

What would settle it

Numerical simulation of a foam injection problem with chosen initial saturations that produces wave speeds or structures different from those listed in the classification would show the method misses solutions.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2506.08152 by Dan Marchesin, Grigori Chapiro, Luis Fernando Lozano.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Saturation triangle Ω. The point U represents the umbilic point for the parameter values in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p003_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Rarefaction curves for the parameter values in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p006_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Graphical conventions for depicting wave curves in figures. Dashed curves indicate shocks. The dash-dotted curve corresponds to a composite curve. Continu￾ous curves with arrows represent rarefaction curves. Arrows indicate the direction of increasing characteristic velocity. The colors blue, red, and green represent slow, fast, and undercompressive families. 5. Riemann solutions We aim to solve the Rieman… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Bifurcation loci in the Ω for the viscosity parameters presented in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p011_4.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Subdivision of the region Γ into eight R-regions Γi , where i ∈ {1, 2, . . . , 8}. (a) Zoom of the region Γ. (b) Zoom of the region close to the cor￾ner O. (c) Zoom of the region close to the corner W [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p012_5.png] view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: The blue dashed curves (respectively, red) represent s-shock curves (re￾spectively, f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively, red) represents the s-rarefaction curves (respectively, the f-rarefaction curves). The arrows indicate increasing characteristic velocity. (a) The black curves [X, T ∗ ] and [G, T ∗ ] repre￾sent the s-right extensions of Wf (R). (b) The black curves [X, T1]ext ∪ [T1,… view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Structure of the Riemann solution for R ∈ Γ3. The blue dashed curve (respectively red) represents s-shock curves (respectively f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively red) represents s-rarefaction curves (respectively the f-rarefaction curve). The arrows indicate the increasing characteristic velocity. The black curve [X, Mc]ext represents the s-right extension of Wf (R). The black curve [… view at source ↗
Figure 8
Figure 8. Figure 8: The blue dashed curves (respectively, red) represent s-shock curves (re￾spectively, f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively, red) represents the s-rarefaction curves (respectively, the f-rarefaction curves). The arrows indicate increasing characteristic velocity. The black curve [X, TS]ext represents the s-right extension of Wf (R). The green dotted segment [F, Z∗ ] ⊂ [G, D] identifies adm… view at source ↗
Figure 9
Figure 9. Figure 9: The blue dashed curves (respectively, red) represent s-shock curves (re￾spectively, f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively, red) represents the s-rarefaction curves (respectively, the f-rarefaction curves). The arrows indicate increasing characteristic velocity. The black curve [X, Mc]ext represents the s-right extension of Wf (R). The black curve [G, U]ext represents the s-right extensio… view at source ↗
Figure 10
Figure 10. Figure 10: The blue dashed curves (respectively, red) represent s-shock curves (re￾spectively, f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively, red) represents the s-rarefaction curves (respectively, the f-rarefaction curves). The arrows indicate increasing characteristic velocity. The black curve [X, TS]ext represents the s-right extension of Wf (R). The green dotted segment [F, Z∗ ] ⊂ [G, D] identifies ad… view at source ↗
Figure 11
Figure 11. Figure 11: The blue dashed curve (respectively red) represents s-shock curves (re￾spectively f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively red) represents s-rarefaction curves (respectively the f-rarefaction curve). The arrows indicate the increasing characteristic velocity. (a) The black curve [X, Mc]ext represents the s-right extension of Wf (R). The black curve [G, U]ext represents the s-right extensio… view at source ↗
Figure 13
Figure 13. Figure 13: The remaining boundaries of Γ7 are: • The blue curve [I 5 s , I 6 s ], which is part of the s-inflection locus; • The purple curve [I 6 s , VD], which marks the boundary where the admissibility of u-shocks changes; and [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p022_13.png] view at source ↗
Figure 12
Figure 12. Figure 12: The blue dashed curve (respectively red) represents s-shock curves (re￾spectively f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively red) represents s-rarefaction curves (respectively the f-rarefaction curve). The arrows indicate the increasing characteristic velocity. (a) The black curve [X, Mc]ext represents the s-right extension of Wf (R). The black curve [G, U]ext represents the s-right extensio… view at source ↗
Figure 13
Figure 13. Figure 13: The blue dashed curve (respectively red) represents s-shock curves (re￾spectively f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively red) represents s-rarefaction curves (respectively the f-rarefaction curve). The arrows indicate the increasing characteristic velocity. The green dotted segment (Z, Z∗ ] ⊂ [G, D] iden￾tifies admissible u-shocks with M. The black curve (TZ, TS]ext is the s-extension of… view at source ↗
Figure 14
Figure 14. Figure 14: Structure of the Riemann solution for R ∈ Γ8. The blue dashed curve (respectively red) represents s-shock curves (respectively f-shock curves). The blue continuous curve (respectively red) represents s-rarefaction curves (respectively the f-rarefaction curve). The arrows indicate the increasing characteristic velocity. The black curve [X, TR]ext ∪ [TR, A3]ext and [G, X2]ext represents the s-right extensio… view at source ↗
Figure 15
Figure 15. Figure 15: Oil bank formation. (a) A solution of the Riemann problem with two shocks enclosing a constant state of elevated oil saturation. (b) Validity region of Theorem 1, highlighting the right states R and its interval IR for which oil bank formation occurs. The black curves represent the composition path for the Riemann problem solution for the left state L [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p028_15.png] view at source ↗
Figure 16
Figure 16. Figure 16: Analytical solution for case 1 with R ∈ Γ6 and L ∈ [LS, LR]. (a) The composition path in the saturation triangle that consists of an s-rarefaction from L to T follows for an s-shock from T to M and an f-shock connecting M to R. (b) Analytical profiles (solid curves) compared to numerical simulations (dashed curves). R ∈ Γ3 and L ∈ [L1, LX]. The solution features an s-composite wave from L to M (L p Rs −−→… view at source ↗
Figure 17
Figure 17. Figure 17: Analytical solution for case 2 with R ∈ Γ3 and L ∈ [L1, LX]. (a) The composition path in the saturation triangle that consists of an s-rarefaction from L to T follows for an s-shock from T to M follows for an f-rarefaction from M to A1 and an f-shock connecting A1 to R. (b) Analytical profiles (solid curves) compared to numerical simulations (dashed curves). The solution features a u-composite wave from L… view at source ↗
Figure 18
Figure 18. Figure 18: Analytical solution for Case 3 with R ∈ Γ6 and L = G. (a) The compo￾sition path in the saturation triangle that consists of an f-rarefaction from G to F follows for a u-shock from F to M and an f-shock connecting M to R. (b) Analytical profiles (solid curves) compared to numerical simulations (dashed curves). The solution features an s-composite wave from L to N (L p Rs −−→ T Ss −→ N), followed by an u-co… view at source ↗
Figure 19
Figure 19. Figure 19: Analytical solution for case 4 with R ∈ Γ3 and L ∈ [G, LF ]. (a) The composition path in the saturation triangle that consists of an s-rarefaction from L to T follows for an s-shock from T to N follows for an f-rarefaction from N to F follows for a u-shock from F to M and an f-shock connecting M to R. (b) Analytical profiles (solid curves) compared to numerical simulations (dashed curves). Our solution is… view at source ↗
Figure 20
Figure 20. Figure 20: The colored region indicates the area within the saturation triangle where the umbilic point U is located to satisfy the inequalities in (15). Points corre￾spond to: A(blue) - [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p033_20.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Gas injection in the context of the three-phase flow in porous media appears in applications such as Enhanced Oil Recovery, aquifer remediation, and carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS). In general, this technique suffers from a difficulty related to excessive gas mobility, which can be circumvented by using foam. This study addresses the non-linear system of differential equations describing the three-phase foam flow based on Corey relative permeability functions. A major obstacle is an umbilic point, where the characteristic wave velocities for different families coincide, complicating the identification of stable wave structures. We developed a methodology to solve the Riemann problem describing the three-phase foam displacement in the case when the gas viscosity exceeds that of oil and water. To allow the analysis, we assume foam in local equilibrium (or maximum foam texture), resulting in a constant mobility reduction factor (MRF). These simplifications allowed the classification of possible solutions for the injection of foamed gas and water mixtures under a wide range of initial conditions within the framework of non-classical Conservation Law Theory. As a relevant industrial application of the proposed solution, we investigate the conditions resulting in oil bank formation. Besides improving the general physical understanding of foam flow in a porous medium, this analysis can be applied to calibrate numerical simulators and perform uncertainty quantification. Our analytical estimates were validated through numerical simulations.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript develops a methodology for solving the Riemann problem in three-phase foam flow through porous media modeled by a 2x2 system of conservation laws with Corey-type relative permeabilities. Under the local-equilibrium assumption that fixes the mobility reduction factor (MRF) as a constant, the authors classify admissible wave structures for foamed-gas/water injection into a range of initial states, with emphasis on conditions that produce an oil bank; the classification is framed in non-classical conservation-law theory and is supported by numerical simulations.

Significance. If the local-equilibrium regime is representative, the explicit classification of Riemann solutions supplies concrete wave-curve constructions and admissible shock loci that can be used to benchmark simulators and to predict oil-bank formation in foam-assisted gas injection. The work therefore contributes a concrete analytical tool within the restricted modeling framework it adopts.

major comments (2)
  1. The central classification rests on the construction of wave curves through the umbilic point; however, the manuscript provides only a high-level description of this construction (see the paragraph following Eq. (3.2) and the discussion in §4). A step-by-step verification that the proposed rarefaction and shock curves satisfy the Liu entropy condition and the correct ordering of characteristic speeds at the umbilic point is required before the claimed completeness of the solution catalogue can be accepted.
  2. §5, numerical validation: the reported simulations use a fixed MRF value; it is not shown how the admissible wave sequences change when a small but non-zero foam-texture transport equation is restored. A single sensitivity test with a variable-MRF model would quantify the robustness of the oil-bank criterion derived under the constant-MRF assumption.
minor comments (2)
  1. Notation: the symbol for the constant MRF is introduced without an explicit equation reference; add a numbered display equation when it first appears.
  2. Figure 4: the phase-plane trajectories near the umbilic point are difficult to read at the printed scale; enlarge the inset or add a separate zoomed panel.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the constructive comments and positive assessment of the manuscript's significance. We address each major comment point by point below, indicating where revisions will be made.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: The central classification rests on the construction of wave curves through the umbilic point; however, the manuscript provides only a high-level description of this construction (see the paragraph following Eq. (3.2) and the discussion in §4). A step-by-step verification that the proposed rarefaction and shock curves satisfy the Liu entropy condition and the correct ordering of characteristic speeds at the umbilic point is required before the claimed completeness of the solution catalogue can be accepted.

    Authors: We agree that a more detailed verification is needed to substantiate the wave-curve constructions. In the revised manuscript we will expand §4 with an explicit step-by-step derivation of the rarefaction and shock curves through the umbilic point. This will include direct computation of the eigenvalues and eigenvectors, verification that the Liu entropy condition holds for the proposed shocks, and confirmation of the correct ordering of characteristic speeds at the umbilic point. revision: yes

  2. Referee: §5, numerical validation: the reported simulations use a fixed MRF value; it is not shown how the admissible wave sequences change when a small but non-zero foam-texture transport equation is restored. A single sensitivity test with a variable-MRF model would quantify the robustness of the oil-bank criterion derived under the constant-MRF assumption.

    Authors: The constant-MRF assumption is central to reducing the model to a 2×2 system of conservation laws and to the analytical classification we present. Restoring the full foam-texture transport equation would yield a larger, non-strictly hyperbolic system whose Riemann solutions lie outside the scope of the present work. We will add a concise discussion in the revised manuscript explaining this modeling choice and the expected qualitative robustness of the oil-bank criterion under small MRF perturbations, but we do not plan to perform a full variable-MRF sensitivity test. revision: no

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity: classification follows directly from governing equations under stated local-equilibrium assumption

full rationale

The paper begins with the standard three-phase conservation laws using Corey relative permeabilities, then explicitly imposes the modeling assumption of local equilibrium (maximum foam texture) to fix the mobility reduction factor as a constant. This reduces the system to a 2x2 hyperbolic conservation law whose umbilic point and wave curves are analyzed via non-classical Riemann theory. The resulting classification of solutions for different injection and initial data follows from the simplified PDE system and standard admissibility criteria; no prediction is obtained by fitting to a subset of the target data, no uniqueness theorem is imported from self-citation, and no ansatz is smuggled in. The constant-MRF choice is presented as an enabling simplification rather than a derived result, leaving the derivation self-contained.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim depends on the local equilibrium assumption for foam and the viscosity ordering; these are domain simplifications that enable the classification but are not independently verified in the abstract.

free parameters (1)
  • constant mobility reduction factor (MRF)
    Assumed constant due to local equilibrium (maximum foam texture) to simplify the non-linear system.
axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Foam in local equilibrium resulting in constant MRF
    Explicitly stated to allow analysis of the three-phase flow equations.
  • domain assumption Corey relative permeability functions for three-phase flow
    Basis for the model of foam, gas, oil, and water interactions.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5775 in / 1358 out tokens · 58102 ms · 2026-05-22T00:09:33.604186+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Lean theorems connected to this paper

Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

What do these tags mean?
matches
The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
supports
The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
extends
The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
uses
The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
contradicts
The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
unclear
Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

63 extracted references · 63 canonical work pages

  1. [1]

    IPCC special report on carbon dioxide capture and storage

    Metz, B., Davidson, O., De Coninck, H., Loos, M., Meyer, L. IPCC special report on carbon dioxide capture and storage. Prepared by Working Group III of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005)

  2. [2]

    The influence of capillary pressure on the phase equilibrium of the CO2–water system: Application to carbon sequestration combined with geothermal energy

    Salimi, H., Wolf, K.-H., Bruining, J. The influence of capillary pressure on the phase equilibrium of the CO2–water system: Application to carbon sequestration combined with geothermal energy. International Journal of Greenhouse Gas Control 11, S47–S66 (2012)

  3. [3]

    S., Ahmed, S., Alameri, W., Froudakis, G

    Iskandarov, J., Fanourgakis, G. S., Ahmed, S., Alameri, W., Froudakis, G. E., Karanikolos, G. N. Data-driven prediction of in situ CO2 foam strength for enhanced oil recovery and carbon sequestration. RSC advances 12, 35703–35711 (2022). 34 REFERENCES

  4. [4]

    Foam–oil interaction in porous media: implications for foam assisted enhanced oil recovery

    Farajzadeh, R., Andrianov, A., Krastev, R., Hirasaki, G., Rossen, W. Foam–oil interaction in porous media: implications for foam assisted enhanced oil recovery. Advances in colloid and interface science 183, 154–197 (2012)

  5. [5]

    Modeling techniques for foam flow in porous media

    Ma, K., Ren, G., Mateen, K., Morel, D., Cordelier, P. Modeling techniques for foam flow in porous media. SPE Journal 20, 453–470 (2015)

  6. [6]

    M., Nasr, N

    Hematpur, H., Mahmood, S. M., Nasr, N. H., Elraies, K. A. Foam flow in porous media: Concepts, models and challenges. Journal of Natural Gas Science and Engineering 53, 163–180 (2018)

  7. [7]

    Chen, Q., Gerritsen, M., Kovscek, A. R. Modeling foam displacement with the local-equilibrium approximation: theory and experimental verification. SPE Journal 15, 171–183 (2010)

  8. [8]

    F., Quinelato, T., Igreja, I., Chapiro, G

    de Paula, F. F., Quinelato, T., Igreja, I., Chapiro, G. A Numerical Algorithm to Solve the Two- Phase Flow in Porous Media Including Foam Displacement in Computational Science – ICCS 2020 (Springer International Publishing, 2020), 18–31

  9. [9]

    F., Igreja, I., Quinelato, T., Chapiro, G

    de Paula, F. F., Igreja, I., Quinelato, T., Chapiro, G. A numerical investigation into the influence of the surfactant injection technique on the foam flow in heterogeneous porous media. Advances in Water Resources 171, 104358 (2023)

  10. [10]

    F., Igreja, I., Quinelato, T., Chapiro, G

    de Paula, F. F., Igreja, I., Quinelato, T., Chapiro, G. Numerical simulation of foam displacement impacted by kinetic and equilibrium surfactant adsorption. Advances in Water Resources 188, 104690 (2024)

  11. [11]

    Ashoori, E., Marchesin, D., Rossen, W. R. Roles of transient and local equilibrium foam behavior in porous media: Traveling wave. Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects 377, 228–242 (2011)

  12. [12]

    Q., Lozano, L

    Zavala, R. Q., Lozano, L. F., Zitha, P. L. J., Chapiro, G. Analytical solution for the population- balance model describing foam displacement. Transport in Porous Media 144, 211–227 (2022)

  13. [13]

    F., Zavala, R

    Lozano, L. F., Zavala, R. Q., Chapiro, G. Mathematical properties of the foam flow in porous media. Computational Geosciences 25, 515–527 (2021)

  14. [14]

    F., Cedro, J

    Lozano, L. F., Cedro, J. B., Zavala, R. Q., Chapiro, G. How simplifying capillary effects can affect the traveling wave solution profiles of the foam flow in porous media. International Journal of Non-Linear Mechanics 139, 103867 (2022)

  15. [15]

    Chapiro, G., Lozano, L. F. Analytical Solution for the Population-Balance Model Describing Foam Displacement Considering Surfactant Dispersion in ECMOR 2022 2022 (2022), 1–12

  16. [16]

    C., Paz, P

    Fritis, G. C., Paz, P. S., Lozano, L. F., Chapiro, G. On the Riemann problem for the foam displacement in porous media with linear adsorption. SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics 84, 581–601 (2024)

  17. [17]

    The mathematical model and analysis of the nanoparticle- stabilized foam displacement

    Danelon, T., Paz, P., Chapiro, G. The mathematical model and analysis of the nanoparticle- stabilized foam displacement. Applied Mathematical Modelling 125, 630–649 (2024)

  18. [18]

    Modeling Nanoparticle-Stabilized Foam Flow in Porous Media Accounting for Particle Retention and Permeability Reduction

    Danelon, T., Farajzadeh, R., Bedrikovetsky, P., Chapiro, G. Modeling Nanoparticle-Stabilized Foam Flow in Porous Media Accounting for Particle Retention and Permeability Reduction. InterPore Journal 2, IPJ260225–3 (2025)

  19. [19]

    J., Afsharpoor, A, Kam, S

    Mayberry, D. J., Afsharpoor, A, Kam, S. I. The use of fractional-flow theory for foam displace- ment in presence of oil. SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering 11, 707–718 (2008)

  20. [20]

    M., Kam, S

    Zanganeh, N. M., Kam, S. I., LaForce, T. C., Rossen, W. R. The method of characteristics applied to oil displacement by foam. SPE journal 16, 8–23 (2011)

  21. [21]

    Three-phase fractional flow analysis for foam-assisted non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) remediation

    Lee, S, Lee, G, Kam, S. Three-phase fractional flow analysis for foam-assisted non-aqueous phase liquid (NAPL) remediation. Transport in porous media 101, 373–400 (2014)

  22. [22]

    Lee, S., Kam, S. I. MoC-Based Modeling and Simulation of Foam EOR Processes in Multi-Layered System in Offshore Technology Conference (2015), OTC–25716

  23. [23]

    Tang, J., Casta˜ neda, P., Marchesin, D., Rossen, W. R. Three-Phase Fractional-Flow Theory of Foam-Oil Displacement in Porous Media With Multiple Steady States.Water Resources Research 55, 10319–10339 (2019). REFERENCES 35

  24. [24]

    Tang, J., Castaneda, P., Marchesin, D., Rossen, W. R. Foam-Oil Displacements in Porous Me- dia: Insights from Three-Phase Fractional-Flow Theory in Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference (2022), D042S195R003

  25. [25]

    Lyu, X., Voskov, D., Tang, J., Rossen, W. R. Simulation of foam enhanced-oil-recovery processes using operator-based linearization approach. SPE Journal 26, 2287–2304 (2021)

  26. [26]

    V., de Souza, A

    Azevedo, A. V., de Souza, A. J., Furtado, F., Marchesin, D. Uniqueness of the Riemann Solution for Three-Phase Flow in a Porous Medium. SIAM J. Appl. Math. 74, 1967–1997 (2014)

  27. [27]

    Wave structure for a nonstrictly hyperbolic system of three conservation laws

    De Souza, A. Wave structure for a nonstrictly hyperbolic system of three conservation laws. Mathematical and computer modelling 22, 1–29 (1995)

  28. [28]

    V., de Souza, A

    Azevedo, A. V., de Souza, A. J., Furtado, F., Marchesin, D., Plohr, B. The solution by the wave curve method of three-phase flow in virgin reservoirs. Transport in porous media 83, 99–125 (2010)

  29. [29]

    Guerrero, L. F. L., Marchesin, D. Diffusive Riemann Solutions for 3-phase flow in Porous Media. Proceeding Series of the Brazilian Society of Computational and Applied Mathematics 7 (2020)

  30. [30]

    ELI, Interactive Graphical Riemann Problem Solver

    ELI. ELI, Interactive Graphical Riemann Problem Solver. https://eli.fluid.impa.br/, Accessed : 2025–06–08 (2025)

  31. [31]

    Diffusive effects in Riemann solutions for the three-phase flow in porous media in Ph.D

    Lozano, L. Diffusive effects in Riemann solutions for the three-phase flow in porous media in Ph.D. thesis (2018)

  32. [32]

    Solution construction to a class of Riemann problems of multiphase flow in porous media

    Mehrabi, M., Sepehrnoori, K., Delshad, M. Solution construction to a class of Riemann problems of multiphase flow in porous media. Transport in porous media 132, 241–266 (2020)

  33. [33]

    Analytical Investigation of the Three-Phase Foam Flow in Porous Media in ECMOR 2024 2024 (2024), 1–9

    Lozano, L, Chapiro, G, Marchesin, D. Analytical Investigation of the Three-Phase Foam Flow in Porous Media in ECMOR 2024 2024 (2024), 1–9

  34. [34]

    Enhanced Oil Recovery (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1989)

    Lake, L. Enhanced Oil Recovery (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1989)

  35. [35]

    Corey, A. T. The Interrelation Between Gas and Oil Relative Permeabilites. Producers Monthly 19, 38–41 (1954)

  36. [36]

    limiting capillary pressure

    Zhou, Z., Rossen, W. Applying fractional-flow theory to foam processes at the “limiting capillary pressure”. SPE Advanced Technology Series 3, 154–162 (1995)

  37. [37]

    Marchesin, D., Plohr, B. J. Wave Structure in WAG Recovery. SPE Journal 6, 209–219 (2001)

  38. [38]

    in Modelling and Optimisation of Flows on Networks: Cetraro, Italy 2009, Editors: Benedetto Piccoli, Michel Rascle 157–245 (Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2013)

    Bressan, A. in Modelling and Optimisation of Flows on Networks: Cetraro, Italy 2009, Editors: Benedetto Piccoli, Michel Rascle 157–245 (Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2013)

  39. [39]

    G., Marchesin, D., Paes-Leme, P

    Shearer, M., Schaeffer, D. G., Marchesin, D., Paes-Leme, P. L. Solution of the Riemann problem for a prototype 2 × 2 system of non-strictly hyperbolic conservation laws. Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 97, 299–320 (1987)

  40. [40]

    Mederios, H. B. Stable hyperbolic singularities for three-phase flow models in oil reservoir simu- lation. Acta Applicandae Mathematica 28, 135–159 (1992)

  41. [41]

    Matos, V., Casta˜ neda, P., Marchesin, D. Classification of the umbilic point in immiscible three- phase flow in porous media in Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Hyperbolic Problems: Theory, Numerics, Applications (Padova, Italy) (2012), 791–799

  42. [42]

    G., Shearer, M

    Schaeffer, D. G., Shearer, M. The classification of 2 × 2 systems of non-strictly hyperbolic conser- vation laws, with application to oil recovery. Communications on pure and applied mathematics 40, 141–178 (1987)

  43. [43]

    Isaacson, E., Marchesin, D., Plohr, B., Temple, J. B. Multiphase flow models with singular Riemann problems. Mat. Apl. Comput 11, 147–166 (1992)

  44. [44]

    V., Da Mota, J

    Matos, V, Azevedo, A. V., Da Mota, J. C., Marchesin, D. Bifurcation under parameter change of Riemann solutions for nonstrictly hyperbolic systems. Z. fur Angew. Math. Phys. 66, 1413–1452 (2015)

  45. [45]

    Three-phase fluid displacement in a porous medium

    Andrade, P., de Souza, A., Furtado, F., Marchesin, D. Three-phase fluid displacement in a porous medium. Journal of Hyperbolic Differential Equations 15, 731–753 (2018)

  46. [46]

    J., Marchesin, D

    Lozano, L., de Souza, A., Furtado, F., Plohr, B. J., Marchesin, D. Displacement of three-phase flow for Heavy Oil: Riemann Solutions. in preparation, 1–57 (2024). 36 REFERENCES

  47. [47]

    Calibrating and scaling semi-empirical foam flow models for the assessment of foam-based EOR processes (in heterogeneous reservoirs)

    Gassara, O., Douarche, F., Braconnier, B, Bourbiaux, B. Calibrating and scaling semi-empirical foam flow models for the assessment of foam-based EOR processes (in heterogeneous reservoirs). Transport in Porous Media 131, 193–221 (2020)

  48. [48]

    Displacement Theory of Low-Tension Gas Flooding

    Mehrabi, M., Sepehrnoori, K., Delshad, M. Displacement Theory of Low-Tension Gas Flooding. Transport in Porous Media 142, 475–491 (2022)

  49. [49]

    Lax, P. D. Hyperbolic systems of conservation laws II. Comm. Pure Appl. Math. 10, 537–566 (1957)

  50. [50]

    The Riemann problem for general systems of conservation laws

    Liu, T.-P. The Riemann problem for general systems of conservation laws. J. Differ. Equ. 18, 218–234 (1975)

  51. [51]

    Gel’fand, I. M. Some problems in the theory of quasilinear equation. Usp. Math. Nauk. 14. Eng. Trans. in Amer. Math. Soc. Trans. Ser. 2, 29, 295-381 (1963), 87–158 (1959)

  52. [52]

    J., Marchesin, D

    Petrova, Y., Plohr, B. J., Marchesin, D. Vanishing adsorption limit of Riemann problem solutions for the polymer model. Journal of Hyperbolic Differential Equations 21, 299–327 (2024)

  53. [53]

    Schecter, S., Marchesin, D., Plohr, B. J. Structurally stable Riemann solutions. J. Differ. Equ. 126, 303–354 (1996)

  54. [54]

    Gomes, M. E. S. Riemann problems requiring a viscous profile entropy condition. Adv. Appl. Math. 10, 285–323 (1989)

  55. [55]

    Transitional waves for conservation laws

    Isaacson, E., Marchesin, D., Plohr, B. Transitional waves for conservation laws. SIAM J. Math. Anal. 21, 837–866 (1990)

  56. [56]

    V., Marchesin, D., Plohr, B, Zumbrun, K

    Azevedo, A. V., Marchesin, D., Plohr, B, Zumbrun, K. Capillary instability in models for three- phase flow. Zeitschrift f¨ ur angewandte Mathematik und Physik ZAMP 53, 713–746 (2002)

  57. [57]

    J., Marchesin, D

    Lozano, L., Ledoino, I., Plohr, B. J., Marchesin, D. Structure of undercompressive shock waves in three-phase flow in porous media 2024. arXiv: 2412.04439 [math.AP]. https://arxiv.org/ abs/2412.04439

  58. [58]

    Ole ˘inik, O. A. On the uniqueness of the generalized solution of the Cauchy problem for a nonlinear system of equations occurring in mechanics. Usp. Mat. Nauk 12, 169–176 (1957)

  59. [59]

    S., Lambert, W

    Eschenazi, C. S., Lambert, W. J., L´ opez-Flores, M. M., Marchesin, D., Palmeira, C. F., Plohr, B. J. Solving Riemann problems with a topological tool. Journal of Differential Equations 416, 2134–2174 (2025)

  60. [60]

    L., de Souza, A

    Andrade, P. L., de Souza, A. J., Furtado, F, Marchesin, D. Oil displacement by water and gas in a porous medium: the Riemann problem. Bulletin of the Brazilian Mathematical Society, New Series 47, 77–90 (2016)

  61. [61]

    Mechanism of Water Flooding in the Presence of Free Gas

    Kyte, J., Stanclift R.J., J., Stephan S.C., J., Rapoport, L. Mechanism of Water Flooding in the Presence of Free Gas. Transactions of the AIME 207, 215–221 (Dec. 1956)

  62. [62]

    Mathematics and numerics for balance partial differential-algebraic equations (pdaes)

    Lambert, W., Alvarez, A., Ledoino, I., Tadeu, D., Marchesin, D., Bruining, J. Mathematics and numerics for balance partial differential-algebraic equations (pdaes). J. Sci. Comput. 84, 29 (2020)

  63. [63]

    H., Fleifel, H., Maestre, D

    Izadi, M., Nguyen, P. H., Fleifel, H., Maestre, D. O., Kam, S. I. An investigation of mechanistic foam modeling for optimum field development of CO2 foam EOR application. SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering 24, 475–494 (2021). Luis Fernando Lozano Laboratory of Applied Mathematics Federal University of Juiz de Fora 36036-900 Juiz de Fora, MG Brazil e-m...