Research Interests

The overarching goal of my research is to advance the scientific understanding of complex solid-fluid interactions in processes that involve extreme conditions in geological porous materials. These conditions include, for example, high stresses, high temperatures, high fluid pressures, various loading rates, heterogeneous internal structure, unconventional fluid characteristics (viscous, heavy, reactive), and soluble solid components. The enhanced understanding will help us to analyze and design the key geo-energy infrastructure systems towards higher efficiency, less environmental impact, and higher adaptation to evolving environmental stressors. Examples of these systems are unconventional fossil energy systems (e.g., shale gas and oil, heavy oil), renewable energy systems (e.g., shallow and deep geothermal energy systems), and geological storage of energy and waste (e.g., solar heat storage, CO2, H2, and nuclear waste disposal). I am interested in engineering these systems because of their tremendous societal impacts, including higher life quality and environmental health. 

Experimental Geomechanics: understanding and quantifying interactions between geo-energy fluids (supercritical water, CO2, H2, brine, oil, gas, and steam) and solids (carbonates, evaporites, granites, shales, etc.) 

Computational Geomechanics:

The behavior of jointed rocks 

Understanding and quantifying the thermal, hydraulic, and mechanical properties of granular materials:

Chemo-mechanical processes in granular materials subject to extreme conditions, e.g., high-stress, high-pressure, high-temperature, and reactive fluid flow