In
fluid dynamics, 'Darcy's law' is a
phenomologically derived
constitutive equation that describes the flow of a
fluid through a
porous medium. The law was formulated by
Henry Darcy based on the results of experiments
[1] on the flow of
water through beds of
sand. It also forms the scientific basis of
fluid permeability used in the
earth sciences.
Background
Although Darcy's law (an expression of
conservation of momentum) was determined experimentally by Darcy, it has since been derived from the
Navier-Stokes equations via
homogenization. It is analogous to
Fourier's law in the field of
heat conduction,
Ohm's law in the field of
electrical networks, or
Fick's law in
diffusion theory.
One application of Darcy's law is to water flow through an
aquifer. Darcy's law along with the equation of
conservation of mass are equivalent to the
groundwater flow equation, one of the basic relationships of
hydrogeology. Darcy's law is also used to describe oil, water, and gas flows through petroleum reservoirs.
Description

Diagram showing definitions and directions for Darcy's law.
Darcy's law is a simple proportional relationship between the instantaneous discharge rate through a porous medium, the viscosity of the fluid and the pressure drop over a given distance.
:
The total discharge,
(units of volume per time, e.g., cm³/s) is equal to the product of the
permeability (
) of the medium, the cross-sectional area (
) to flow, and the pressure drop (
), all divided by the viscosity
, and the length
the pressure drop is taking place over. The negative sign is needed because fluids flows from high pressure to low pressure. So if the change in pressure is negative (in the
-direction) then the flow will be positive (in the
-direction). Dividing both sides of the equation by the area and using more general notation leads to
:
where
is the
flux (discharge per unit area, with units of length per time, m/s) and
is the
pressure gradient vector. This value of flux, often referred to as the Darcy flux, is not the velocity which the water traveling through the pores is experiencing
[2].
The pore velocity (
) is related to the Darcy flux (
) by the
porosity (
). The flux is divided by porosity to account for the fact that only a fraction of the total formation volume is available for flow. The pore velocity would be the velocity a conservative tracer would experience if carried by the fluid through the formation.
:
In 3D
In
three dimensions,
gravity must be accounted for, as fluid will not flow vertically as a result of the vertical gravitational pressure drop (this is
hydrostatic conditions). The correction is to subtract the gravitational pressure drop from the existing pressure drop in the equation in order to express the resulting fluid flow,
:
where the flux
is now a vector quantity,
is a tensor of permeability,
is the
gradient operator in 3D,
is the
acceleration due to gravity,
is the
unit vector in the vertical direction, pointing downwards and
is the
density.
Effects of
anisotropy are addressed in three-dimensions using a
symmetric second-order
tensor of permeability:
:
where the magnitudes of permeability in the ''x'', ''y'', and ''z'' component directions are specified. Since this a symmetric matrix, there are ''at most'' six unique values. If the permeability is isotropic (equal magnitude in all directions), then the
diagonal values are equal,
, while all other components are 0. The permeability tensor can be interpreted through an evaluation the relative magnitudes in each component. For example, rock with highly permeable vertical
fractures aligned in the ''x''-direction will have relatively higher values for
than other component values.
Assumptions
Darcy's law is a simple mathematical statement which neatly summarizes several familiar properties that
groundwater flowing in
aquifers exhibits, including:
★ if there is no pressure gradient over a distance), no flow occurs (this is
hydrostatic conditions),
★ if there is a pressure gradient, flow will occur from high pressure towards low pressure (opposite the direction of increasing gradient - hence the negative sign in Darcy's law),
★ the greater the pressure gradient (through the same formation material), the greater the discharge rate, and
★ the discharge rate of fluid will often be different — through different formation materials (or even through the same material, in a different direction) — even if the same pressure gradient exists in both cases.
A graphical illustration of the use of the steady-state
groundwater flow equation (based on Darcy's law and the conservation of mass) is in the construction of
flownets, to quantify the amount of
groundwater flowing under a
dam.
Darcy's law is only valid for slow,
viscous flow; fortunately, most groundwater flow cases fall in this category. Typically any flow with a
Reynolds number less than one is clearly laminar, and it would be valid to apply Darcy's law. Experimental tests have shown that for flow regimes with values of Reynolds number up to 10 may still be Darcian. Reynolds number (a dimensionless parameter) for porous media flow is typically expressed as
:
.
where
is the
density of
water (units of mass per volume),
is the specific discharge (not the pore velocity — with units of length per time),
is a representative grain diameter for the porous medium (often taken as the 30% passing size from a
grain size analysis using sieves), and
is the
viscosity of the fluid.
Additional forms of Darcy's law
Time derivative of flux
For very short time scales, a time derivative of flux may be added to Darcy's law, which results in valid solutions at very small times (in heat transfer, this is called the modified form of
Fourier's law),
:
where
is a very small time constant which causes this equation to reduce to the normal form of Darcy's law at "normal" times (>
nanoseconds). The main reason for doing this is that the regular
groundwater flow equation (
diffusion equation) leads to
singularities at constant head boundaries at very small times. This form is more mathematically rigorous, but leads to a
hyperbolic groundwater flow equation, which is more difficult to solve and is only useful at very small times, typically out of the realm of practical use.
Brinkman term
Another extension to the traditional form of Darcy's law is the Brinkman term, which is used to account for transitional flow between boundaries (introduced by Brinkman in 1947),
:
where
is an effective
viscosity term. This correction term accounts for flow through medium where the grains of the media are porous themselves, but is difficult to use, and is typically neglected.
Multiphase flow
For
multiphase flow, an approximation is to use Darcy's law for each phase, with permeability replaced by phase permeability, which is the permeability of the rock multiplied with
relative permeability. This approximation is valid if the interfaces between the fluids remain static, which is not true in general, but it is still a reasonable model under steady-state conditions.
Assuming that the flow of a phase in the presence of another phase can be viewed as single phase flow through a reduced pore network, we can add the subscript
for each phase to Darcy's law above written for Darcy flux, and obtain for each phase in multiphase flow
:
where
is the ''phase permeability'' for phase
. From this we also define
relative permeability for phase
as
:
where
is the permeability for the porous medium, as in Darcy's law.
Forchheimer equation for non-Darcy flow
For a sufficiently high flow velocity, the flow is nonlinear, and Dupuit and Forchheimer has proposed to generalize the flow equation to
:
where
is the flow velocity and
is a factor to be experimentally deduced.
References
1. H. Darcy, Les Fontaines Publiques de la Ville de Dijon, Dalmont, Paris (1856).
2. See Flux Flummoxed: A Proposal for Consistent Usage, , Philip H., Stauffer, Ground Water, 2006 for a discussion of the many, sometimes confusing names given to () in the ground water
literature.
See also
★ The
darcy unit of fluid
permeability
★
Hydrogeology
★
Groundwater discharge
★
Groundwater flow equation
★
Richards equation
★
Darcy friction factor