Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
Polishing image
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
  • Loading branch information
castelletto1 committed May 16, 2024
1 parent c97947a commit 4a2706b
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Showing 4 changed files with 188 additions and 58 deletions.
Binary file added src/docs/JOSS/RW_final.pdf
Binary file not shown.
239 changes: 186 additions & 53 deletions src/docs/JOSS/RW_final.svg
Loading
Sorry, something went wrong. Reload?
Sorry, we cannot display this file.
Sorry, this file is invalid so it cannot be displayed.
Binary file modified src/docs/JOSS/RW_mesh.png
Loading
Sorry, something went wrong. Reload?
Sorry, we cannot display this file.
Sorry, this file is invalid so it cannot be displayed.
7 changes: 2 additions & 5 deletions src/docs/JOSS/paper.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -136,13 +136,10 @@ To date GEOS has been used to simulate problems relevant to CO2 storage, enhance
Often these simulations involve coupling between compositional multiphase flow and transport, poroelasticity, thermal transport, and interactions with faults and fractures.

As an example of a field case where GEOS has been applied, we present a simulation of CO2 storage at a large real-world storage site.
Figure \ref{RW_mesh} illustrates the computational mesh and Figure \ref{RW_results} show results after 25 years of injection.
Figure \ref{RW_final}a illustrates the computational mesh and Figure \ref{RW_final}b shows results after 25 years of injection.
Simulations such as these play a critical role in predicting the performance of potential CO2 storage sites.

![Discrete mesh of a real world CO2 storage site. Transparency is used for the overburden region to reveal the complex faulted structure of the storage reservoir.\label{RW_mesh}](RW_mesh.png){ width=80% }


![Results of a compositional flow simulation of a real world CO2 storage site after 25 years of CO2 injection. The CO2 plume is shown in white near the bottom of the well. Colors in the reservoir layer indicate changes in fluid pressure, and the colors in the overburden indicate vertical displacement resulting from the injection. Note that color scales have been removed intentionally.\label{RW_results}](RW_results.pdf){ width=80% }
![Real world CO2 storage site: (a) discrete mesh, transparency is used for the overburden region to reveal the complex faulted structure of the storage reservoir; (b) results of a compositional flow simulation of a real world CO2 storage site after 25 years of CO2 injection. The CO2 plume is shown in white near the bottom of the well. Colors in the reservoir layer indicate changes in fluid pressure, and the colors in the overburden indicate vertical displacement resulting from the injection. Note that color scales have been removed intentionally.\label{RW_results}](RW_results.pdf){ width=1oo% }


As an example of the weak scalability of GEOS on exascale systems, we present two weak scaling studies on a simple wellbore geometry using the exascale Frontier supercomputer located at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Expand Down

0 comments on commit 4a2706b

Please sign in to comment.