Ongoing research projects
Please scroll down to learn about the current research projects in our group.
This is also the place to learn about open positions.
If you have any inquiries, please contact Oshri.
Impact of porous medium structure on hydrogen storage efficiency
We have an open position for a graduate student or postdoc.
Hydrogen storage in the subsurface, e.g., in depleted oil reservoirs or saline aquifers, can be a complementary technology for renewable energy storage. However, the ideal porous medium structure and its relation to injection-withdrawal rates are still unclear. This project aims to advance our understanding of these topics through pore-scale microfluidic experiments and numerical simulations.
This project is funded by the Israeli Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure, and performed in collaboration with Dr. Yaniv Edery from the Technion.
Image credit: Muhammed et al. 2023.
Impact of biofilms on drainage in heterogeneous porous media
We have an open position for a graduate student.
Biofilms are dense bacterial colonies encapsulated in extracellular polymers. Biofilms can develop within the soil pore space and may impact the soil's physical properties. In this project, we are studying the interplay between porous medium structure, biofilm growth, and water drainage patterns. We use microfluidic porous medium devices with varying heterogeneity to grow biofilms and perform drainage experiments to test their impact on drainage patterns.
This project is done in collaboration with Dr. Elhanan Tzipilevich from MIGAL.
Image credit: Leah Oren.
Impact of heterogeneity on solute transport and mixing in unsaturated porous media
Porous media heterogeneity - variation in pore sizes and their structure - can impact unsaturated flow patterns and influence transport and mixing of solutes.
Under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions project UnsatPorMix, this research project aims to test experimentally and numerically the impact of various pore size distributions and their spatial correlation on unsaturated flow patterns and the effect on solute transport and mixing.
Follow more closely and learn more in the dedicated section!
Collaborators:
Dr. Yves Méheust and Dr. Tanguy Le Borgne, Géoscience Rennes, Université de Rennes 1
Publications:
Borgman, O., Turuban, R., Géraud, B., Le Borgne, T. & Méheust, Y. Solute front shear and coalescence control concentration gradient dynamics in porous micromodel. Geophysical Research Letters 50, e2022GL101407 (2023).
Past research projects
Colloid transport in fractures
Transport of colloids in fractured rock is an important process related to the migration of pollutants in groundwater systems. However, the role of the fracture surface heterogeneity on colloid transport is still not fully resolved.
We conduct a series of experiments in a flow cell containing naturally fractured rock samples while utilizing direct visualization of fluorescent colloids to assess their transport behavior.
Our experiments show the impact of flow channeling on colloid transport in fractured rock, and the relation between direct observations to measured breakthrough curves.
Collaborators:
Prof. Noam Weisbrod and Prof. Avraham Be'er, Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research, Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben Gurion University of the Negev
Publications:
Borgman, O., Be’er, A. & Weisbrod, N. Direct visualization of colloid transport over natural heterogeneous and artificial smooth rock surfaces. Journal of Contaminant Hydrology 251, 104067 (2022).
Drying in deformable granular media
Drying in deformable granular media is a crucial component in many natural and industrial processes.
In this project, we couple a pore-network model of drying porous media with a micro-mechanical model for grain displacement to capture the two-way coupling between drying and solid matrix deformations.
We find that drying may lead to the opening of preferential fluid displacement pathways and that this phenomenon is more favorable with homogeneous and loosely packed granular beds.
Collaborators:
Dr. Ran Holtzman, The Department of Soil and Water Sciences, The Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Fluid and Complex Systems Research Centre, Coventry University
Publications:
Borgman and Holtzman (2020), Impact of matrix deformations on drying of granular materials
Impact of heterogeneity on immiscible displacement in porous media
Drying and drainage are two types of immiscible displacement processes which occur in porous media and are relevant for environmental and industrial processes. In this project, we investigate the impact of porous medium heterogeneity and the spatial correlation in pore sizes on these processes. We do this by a combination of pore-network models and microfluidic experiments.
With these, we show how spatial correlations in pore sizes control displacement patterns and drying rates and emphasize the need to include the porous medium structure in modeling frameworks, and not only the pore size distributions.
Collaborators:
Dr. Ran Holtzman, The Department of Soil and Water Sciences, The Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Fluid and Complex Systems Research Centre, Coventry University
Dr. Lucas Goehring, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, and Nottingham Trent University
Dr. Paolo Fantinel, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization
Wieland Lühder, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization
Dr. Soumyajyoti Biswas, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization
Dr. Enrico Segre, Weizmann Institute of Science
Thomas Darwent, Nottingham Trent University
Publications:
Borgman et al. (2019), Immiscible fluid displacement in porous media with spatially correlated particle sizes
Biswas, Fantinel, Borgman et al. (2018), Drying and percolation in correlated porous media
Borgman et al. (2017), Impact of spatially correlated pore-scale heterogeneity on drying porous media
Fantinel, Borgman et al. (2017), Drying in a microfluidic chip: Experiments and simulations
Transport of pharmaceutical compounds in agricultural soil
Irrigation with treated wastewater is a possible source for pharmaceutical compounds in agricultural soils, while the application of biosolids originating from wastewater treatment plants can be both a source and an adsorbent for such contaminants.
In this project, we tried to learn about the interplay between these components in soil column experiments with varying solution chemistry.
Our results show how transport of pharmaceutical compounds can be inhibited by the addition of biosolids, and in some cases enhanced by variations in soil solution pH.
Collaborator:
Prof. Benny Chefetz, The Department of Soil and Water Sciences, The Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Publications:
Borgman and Chefetz (2013), Combined effects of biosolids application and irrigation with reclaimed wastewater on transport of pharmaceutical compounds in arable soils