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Vladimir Alvarado, Assistant Professor of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering
Room 4030, Engineering Building
University of Wyoming
College of Engineering and Applied Science
Department of Chemical & Petroleum Engineering
Dept. 3295
1000 E. University Avenue
Laramie, WY 82071
Education
My Research focuses on Enhanced-Oil Recovery (EOR) activities including screening methods for assisting decision-making on one hand. A combination of data mining and analytical simulation assists the creation of simplified decision spaces. Monitoring techniques for EOR operations such as time-lapse seismic and tracer tests are also of my interest. Uncertainty propagation and upscaling are two pillars of feasibility analysis for monitoring techniques. In recent years, I have been involved with experimental and modeling initiatives to investigate flow of dispersions (emulsions) through porous media. Observation of flow phenomena (jamming, drop breakup, etc.) in glass pore-throat models helps to formulate single-pore models as well as network models for these flows in porous media. While current simulation models do not account for some important phenomenology, planned modeling strategies such as Lattice-Boltzmann techniques will hopefully handle several of the most important events at the pore scale. This research focuses on understanding the flow mechanisms for the development of EOR and well-conformance strategies based on dispersions. The ultimate objective of this research is to create robust reservoir simulation models for dispersion flows.