Hi Jean,
Let me tell you what i’ve done, and what i know about other people’s work. I would love it if you built on my work.
(1) I’ve coded the multi-phase Richards equation into MOOSE, and it is being used extensively at my institution primarily to simulate underground fluid flows around coal mining operations (water and methane gas). The doco is:
http://mooseframework.org/wiki/PhysicsModules/Richards/
Note there is no phase transition here: it is just a certain number of phases that do not transform into each other, but affect each other through capillarity. This is standard for solving water+gas, or water+oil+gas, or water-only, etc type of systems. However, other people have been solving water+steam problems using MOOSE – i’ll let them chime in here. Also, Rob Podgorney and collaborators at INL have used MOOSE to study liquidwater+heat systems in geothermal environments – i think their moose application is not yet open-source.
(2) I’ve coded poro-mechanics for fully-saturated single-phase Darcy flow into MOOSE. This is recent work, and some doco is at:
http://mooseframework.org/wiki/PhysicsModules/TensorMechanics/TensorMechanicsBasics/PoroMechanics/
The examples given in that page are just poro-elasticity, but that is just because of the availability of analytical solutions: the formulation also works for poro-elasto-plasticity, and this is being used by other colleagues at CSIRO. Also, there are no examples yet for poro-thermo-mechanics, but i believe that MOOSE should have that capability as it stands. I’m trying to get other people to do some examples/tests of this feature since i’m currently working on other things. Please feel free to chip in! The next step I would love to do would be poro-mechanics for unsaturated/multiphase Richards flow. The equations are documented in that link above, but i just haven’t had time to implement them yet, and there are some architectural choices regarding the evolution of porosity that I haven’t figured out yet.
Other things I know about:
(1) Thomas Poulet and collaborators have an application called ‘redback’ that does thermal-fluid-mechanical-chemical couplings in certain situations. They appear a little reticent to contribute this into a module, but i’m pretty sure they’d love you to use their code.
(2) Chris Green is extending the multi-phase richards stuff to multi-component fluids (eg, mixtures of CO2 and CH4), but i think he’s in the testing phase and he hasn’t yet contributed that work to modules.
a
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Podgorney, R., Hai. Huang and D. Gaston (2010), A Fully-Coupled, Implicit, Finite Element Model for Simultaneously Solving Multiphase Fluid Flow, Heat Transport, and Rock Deformation, Geothermal Resources Council Transactions, 34: 427-432.
http://pubs.geothermal-library.org/lib/grc/1028682.pdf