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T. de Rojas Cordero

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The aerodynamic, elastic, and inertial components in Collar’s triangle of forces acting on a flexible wing with span width s=1.75  m and chord c=0.25  m are determined based on integrated optical measurements of the structural and aerodynamic response to steady and unsteady periodic inflow conditions at a chord-based Reynolds number of 2.3×105. The measurement device is a coaxial volumetric velocimeter mounted on a robotic arm, which is used to perform optical measurements of fiducial markers on the wing surface, and helium-filled soap bubbles, which are used as flow tracers. The optical measurements of the structural markers and the flow tracers are both processed with the Lagrangian particle tracking algorithm Shake-the-Box. Subsequently, physical models are used to determine the inertial and elastic forces of the aeroelastic interaction from the marker tracking results, and to determine the unsteady aerodynamic lift force from the flow velocity fields. The results of this integrated aeroelastic characterization approach are in physical agreement with each other according to the equilibrium of forces in Collar’s triangle and good agreement with external reference measurements. ...
Journal article (2013) - D. Arnold, V. Demyanov, D. Tatum, M. Christie, T. Rojas, S. Geiger, P. Corbett
Benchmark problems have been generated to test a number of issues related to predicting reservoir behaviour (e.g. Floris et al., 2001, Christie and Blunt, 2001, Peters et al., 2010). However, such cases are usually focused on a particular aspect of the reservoir model (e.g. upscaling, property distribution, history matching, uncertainty prediction, etc.) and the other decisions in constructing the model are fixed by log values that are related to the distribution of cell properties away from the wells, fixed grids and structural features and fixed fluid properties. This is because all these features require an element of interpretation, from indirect measurements of the reservoir, noisy and incomplete data and judgments based on domain knowledge.Therefore, there is a need for a case study that would consider interpretational uncertainty integrated throughout the reservoir modelling workflow. In this benchmark study we require the modeller to make interpretational choices as well as to select the techniques applied to the case study, namely the geomodelling approach, history matching algorithm and/or uncertainty quantification technique. The interpretational choices will be around the following areas: (1)Top structure interpretation from seismic and well picks.(2)Fault location, dimensions and the connectivity of the network uncertainty.(3)Facies modelling approach.(4)Facies interpretations from well logs cutoffs.(5)Petrophysical property prediction from the available well data.(6)Grid resolution-choice between number of iterations and model resolution to capture the reservoir features adequately.A semi-synthetic study is based on real field data provided: production data, seismic sections to interpret the faults and top structures, wireline logs to identify facies correlations and saturation profile and porosity and permeability data and a host of other data. To make this problem useable in a manageable time period multiple hierarchically related gridded models were produced for a range of different interpretational choices. ...