\documentclass[reqno]{amsart}
\usepackage{hyperref}

\AtBeginDocument{{\noindent\small
\emph{Electronic Journal of Differential Equations},
Vol. 2009(2009), No. 01, pp. 1--27.\newline
ISSN: 1072-6691. URL: http://ejde.math.txstate.edu or http://ejde.math.unt.edu
\newline ftp ejde.math.txstate.edu  (login: ftp)}
\thanks{\copyright 2009 Texas State University - San Marcos.}
\vspace{9mm}}

\begin{document}
\title[\hfilneg EJDE-2009/01\hfil Partially fractured media]
{Homogenized model for flow in partially fractured media}

\author[C. Choquet\hfil EJDE-2009/01\hfilneg]
{Catherine Choquet}

\address{Catherine Choquet \newline
 Universit\'e P. C\'ezanne,  LATP, CNRS UMR 6632 \\
 et Universit\'e de Savoie, LAMA, CNRS UMR 5127\\
 FST, Case Cour A,  13397 Marseille Cedex 20,  France}
\email{c.choquet@univ-cezanne.fr}

\thanks{Submitted November 20, 2008. Published January 2, 2009.}
\subjclass[2000]{76S05, 35K55, 35B27, 76M50}
\keywords{Miscible compressible displacement; porous medium; \hfill\break\indent
 partially fractured reservoir;  double porosity; homogenization;
\hfill\break\indent
 two-scale limit of a degenerate parabolic equation}

\begin{abstract}
 We derive rigorously a homogenized model for the displacement of one
 compressible miscible fluid by another in a partially fractured porous
 reservoir.  We denote by $\epsilon$ the characteristic size of
 the heterogeneity  in the medium.  A function $\alpha$ characterizes
 the cracking degree of the rock.
 Our starting point is an adapted microscopic model which is scaled by
 appropriate powers of $\epsilon$.  We then study its limit as
 $\epsilon \to 0$. Because of the partially fractured character of
 the medium, the equation expressing the conservation of total mass
 in the flow is of degenerate parabolic type.
 The homogenization process for this equation is thus nonstandard.
 To overcome this difficulty,  we adapt  two-scale convergence techniques,
 convexity arguments and classical compactness tools. The homogenized
 model contains both single porosity and double porosity characteristics.
\end{abstract}

\maketitle
\numberwithin{equation}{section}
\newtheorem{theorem}{Theorem}[section]
\newtheorem{lemma}[theorem]{Lemma}
\newtheorem{proposition}[theorem]{Proposition}
\allowdisplaybreaks


\section{Introduction and main result}


We consider the displacement of a two-component mixture through a
highly contrasted porous medium, with fractures and matrix blocks.
Assuming that the matrix blocks are disconnected, one usually
models this type of setting using the concept of double porosity
introduced by Barenblatt et al \cite{Bar}. The fractured part is
responsible for the macro-scale transport and the matrix part can
store a concentration longer than is to be expected in a single
porous material. The less permeable part of the rock thus
contributes as global sink or source terms for the transported
solutes in the fracture (see for instance \cite{Dou,Cho2}). By the
way, the matrix of cells may also be connected so that some flow
occurs directly within the cell matrix. We consider here such a
{\it partially fissured medium}. Most commercial simulators have
the added feature of including matrix-matrix connections. But
there are very few theoretical derivations  of a model for this
phenomenon. The uncertainties relating to the size of the physical
structure and the fluid content of the reservoir make
understanding fluid flow through homogenization a pragmatic
approach.


The present paper is an extension  of the works
\cite{DS,Sho,EJDE}. In these latter references, the degree of
interconnection between matrix  and fractured part of the medium,
was characterized by a constant averaged parameter. In the present
paper, a function $\alpha$ describes the interconnection. This
function may be zero in the {\it  totally fractured part}
$\Omega_0$ of the domain $\Omega$, and some technical challenges
are encountered there. The required estimates for the
homogenization process involve the degenerating function $\alpha$
and are technically more challenging than in \cite{EJDE}. The
final homogenized equation are different in $\Omega_0$ and in
$\Omega \setminus \Omega_0$. From a more physical viewpoint, this
contribution aims to give a model  more adapted to the local
geometry of a natural domain. The interconnection function
$\alpha$ is considered as a first order property of the medium,
comparable, for instance, with the fracture intensity function.

We begin by recalling the equations describing the transport of
two miscible species  in a slightly compressible flow through  a
homogeneous porous medium, see \cite{B,Pe,DR} for details. The
unknowns of the problem are  the pressure $p$ and the
concentration $c$ of one of the two species of the mixture.
Denoting by $\phi$ the porosity of the rock and by $k$ its
permeability, the mass conservation principles during the
displacement are expressed by the equations
\begin{gather}
 \phi \partial_t p + \mathop{\rm div}( \underline{v}) =q_s, \quad
\underline{v} = - \frac{k}{\mu(c)} \nabla p,
\label{1.1} \\
 \phi \partial_t c + \underline{v}  \cdot \nabla c -\mathop{\rm
div}(\mathcal{D}(\underline{v}) \nabla c) = q_s(\hat{c}-c).
\label{1.2}
\end{gather}
The average velocity of the flow  $\underline{v}$ is given by the
Darcy  law in (\ref{1.1}). We neglect the gravitational terms. The
viscosity $\mu$ is a nonlinear function depending on the
concentration. For instance, in the Koval model \cite{Ko}, $\mu$
is defined for $c \in (0,1)$ by $\mu(c)=\mu(0) (1+(M^{1/4}-1)c
)^{-4}$, the constant $M=\mu(0)/\mu(1)$ being the mobility ratio.
Analogous to Fick's law the dispersive flux is considered
proportional to the concentration gradient and the  dispersion
tensor is
\begin{equation}
\mathcal{D}(\underline{v})
=\phi_f \bigl(D_m  Id + D_p(\underline{v})  \bigr)
= \phi_f \bigl(  D_m  Id +
|\underline{v}| \left( \alpha_l  \mathcal{E}(\underline{v}) +
  \alpha_t  (Id -  \mathcal{E}(\underline{v}) ) \right)
\bigr) ,
\label{1.3}
\end{equation}
where $\mathcal{E}(\underline{v})_{ij} = \underline{v}_i
\underline{v}_j / |\underline{v}|^2  $, $\alpha_l$ and $\alpha_t$
are the longitudinal and transverse  dispersion constants and
$D_m$ is the molecular diffusion. For the usual rates of flow,
these real numbers are such that $\alpha_l \ge \alpha_t \ge D_m > 0$.
 The terms containing $q_s$ are the injection and production terms.

We now aim to study a similar flow in a partially fractured porous
medium. We thus consider  a domain $\Omega \subset \mathbb{R}^3$
with a periodic structure, controlled by a parameter $\epsilon >0$
which represents the size of each block of the matrix. The
$\mathcal{C}^1$ boundary of $\Omega$ is $\Gamma$ and $\nu$ is the
corresponding exterior normal. The standard period ($\epsilon =1$)
is a cell $Y$ consisting of a matrix block $Y_m$ of external
$\mathcal{C}^1$ boundary $\partial Y_m$ and of a fracture domain
$Y_f$. We assume that $\vert Y \vert =1$. The $\epsilon$-reservoir
consists of copies $\epsilon Y$ covering $\Omega$. The two
subdomains of $\Omega$ are defined by
$$
\Omega_f^{\epsilon}= \Omega \cap \bigl\lbrace \cup_{\xi \in \mathcal{A}}
 \epsilon (Y_f + \xi )\bigr\rbrace ,
\quad \Omega_m^{\epsilon}= \Omega \cap \bigl\lbrace \cup_{\xi \in
\mathcal{A}} \epsilon ( Y_m + \xi )\bigr\rbrace ,
$$
where
$\mathcal{A}$ is an appropriate infinite lattice.
The fracture-matrix interface is denoted by $\Gamma_{fm}^\epsilon =
\partial \Omega_f^{\epsilon} \cap \partial \Omega_m^{\epsilon}
\cap \Omega$ and $\nu_{fm}$ is the corresponding unit normal
pointing out   $\Omega_f^{\epsilon}$. See  \cite{DS} and
\cite{Acer} for some illustrations of admissible structures. To
homogenize the reservoir, we shall let tend to zero the size
$\epsilon$ of the cells.

Following \cite{DS},  we assume that the flow  is made of two
parts. The first component accounts for the global diffusion in
the fracture system. The second one corresponds to high frequency
spatial variations which lead to local storage in the matrix. A
function $\alpha \in \mathcal{C}^1(\overline \Omega)$
characterizes the interconnection between fractures and matrix. It
is assumed such that
\begin{gather*}
 0 \le \alpha(x) < 1, \; \alpha(x) + \beta(x) =1,\\
 \alpha(x) = 0 \quad  \text{if and only if }  x \in \Omega_0,
\end{gather*}
where $\Omega_0$ is a bounded open subset of $\Omega$. It may be
given by experimental data on samples of porous media and by
stochastic reconstruction (see \cite{Adl} and the references
therein). The function $\alpha$ describing the {\it
interconnection intensity}  is obviously linked with the commonly
used concepts of fracture intensity and fracture-size distribution
(see for instance \cite{Nelson}). Note that in \cite{DS,Sho} and
\cite{EJDE}, the cracking degree was characterized by a constant
$\alpha \in (0,1)$.

We thus adapt System (\ref{1.1})-(\ref{1.2}) to such a
decomposition of the flow. We also scale the equations for the
rapidly varying part by appropriate powers of $\epsilon$ to
conserve the flow between the matrix and the fractures as
$\epsilon \to 0$ ({\it cf} \cite{Dou,DS}). The complete derivation
of the microscopic model is justified in \cite{EJDE}. Denoting by
$J=(0,T)$, $T>0$, the time interval of interest, we consider:
\begin{gather}
 \phi_f^\epsilon  \partial_t f_1^\epsilon +
\underline{v}_f^\epsilon \cdot \nabla f_1^\epsilon - \mathop{\rm
div}(\mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla f_1^\epsilon )
= q_s (\hat{f}_1-f_1^\epsilon) \quad \text{in } \Omega_f^\epsilon
\times J,
\label{1.4} \\
  \phi_f^\epsilon \partial_t p_f^\epsilon
+\mathop{\rm div}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon) = q_s, \
\underline{v}_f^\epsilon = -
\frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)} \nabla p_f^\epsilon \quad
\text{in }\Omega_f^\epsilon  \times J,
\label{1.5}  \\
 \phi^\epsilon \partial_t C_1^\epsilon +
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla C_1^\epsilon -
\mathop{\rm
div}(\mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon )
\nabla C_1^\epsilon ) = q_s (\hat{C}_1-C_1^\epsilon) \quad
\text{in }  \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J,
\label{1.6} \\
 \phi^\epsilon \partial_t c_1^\epsilon +
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla c_1^\epsilon -
\mathop{\rm
div}(\mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon )
\nabla c_1^\epsilon ) = q_s (\hat{c}_1-c_1^\epsilon) \quad \text{in }
 \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J,
\label{1.7} \\
 \phi^\epsilon \partial_t c_2^\epsilon +
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla c_2^\epsilon -
\mathop{\rm
div}(\mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon )
\nabla c_2^\epsilon ) = q_s (\hat{c}_2-c_2^\epsilon) \quad
\text{in }\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J,
\label{1.8} \\
 \phi^\epsilon \partial_t p^\epsilon +
\mathop{\rm div}(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon  ) =q_s, \quad
    \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon=  \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon+  \epsilon \underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon,
\quad \text{in }  \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J,
\label{1.9} \\
 \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon = -\alpha
(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) \frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)}
\nabla p^\epsilon, \;
  \underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon = -(1-\alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) ) \frac{\epsilon k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)} \nabla p^\epsilon,
\label{1.10}
\end{gather}
where $m_1^\epsilon= \alpha c_1^\epsilon+\beta C_1^\epsilon$.
 The flow in the fractures is described by \eqref{1.4}-\eqref{1.5}.
 The matrix behavior is described by \eqref{1.6}-\eqref{1.10}.
 In particular, \eqref{1.6} governs the slowly varying component while
(\ref{1.7})-(\ref{1.8}) governs the high frequency varying ones.
We note that the former system becomes of double degenerate type as
$\epsilon \to 0$.
Indeed, in the subset $\Omega_0$, the parabolic character of
(\ref{1.6})-(\ref{1.9}) is only ensured by the term $\epsilon^2$.
Moreover Eq. (\ref{1.9}) is also of degenerate parabolic type in
$\Omega \setminus \Omega_0$ since we can solely state that
$(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)(x,t) \ge 0$ in $\Omega \times J$.

The model is completed by the following boundary and initial conditions.
We begin by the transmission  relations across  the interface
$\Gamma_{fm}^\epsilon \times J$.
\begin{gather}
\beta\mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla f_1^\epsilon
\cdot \nu_{fm} =  \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon)  \nabla C_1^\epsilon \cdot
\nu_{fm},
\label{1.11} \\
\alpha\mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla f_1^\epsilon
\cdot \nu_{fm} =  \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon)  \nabla c_1^\epsilon \cdot
\nu_{fm},
\label{1.12}\\
 \alpha\mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla
(1-f_1^\epsilon )\cdot \nu_{fm} = -
\alpha\mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla f_1^\epsilon
\cdot \nu_{fm} =  \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon)  \nabla c_2^\epsilon \cdot
\nu_{fm},
\label{1.13}\\
 f_1^\epsilon = \alpha c_1^\epsilon + \beta C_1^\epsilon ,
 \quad \alpha(c_1^\epsilon + c_2^\epsilon)= \alpha,
\label{1.14}\\
 \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \cdot \nu_{fm} =
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon \cdot \nu_{fm}, \quad
p_f^\epsilon = p^\epsilon. \label{1.15}
\end{gather}
We add a zero flux condition out of the full domain $\Omega$
\begin{gather}
 \mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla f_1^\epsilon \cdot
\nu =0\  \text{on} \  \partial \Omega_f^\epsilon \cap \Gamma,
\label{1.16}\\
 \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \nabla
C_1^\epsilon \cdot \nu =
\mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \nabla
c_1^\epsilon \cdot \nu =
\mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \nabla
c_2^\epsilon \cdot \nu =0 \  \text{on} \  \partial
\Omega_m^\epsilon \cap \Gamma,
\label{1.17}\\
 \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \cdot \nu =0 \  \text{on} \  \partial
\Omega_f^\epsilon \cap \Gamma, \quad \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon
\cdot \nu =0 \  \text{on} \  \partial \Omega_m^\epsilon \cap
\Gamma, \label{1.18}
\end{gather}
and the following initial conditions in $\Omega$
\begin{gather}
(f_1^\epsilon(x,0),C_1^\epsilon(x,0),c_1^\epsilon(x,0),c_2^\epsilon(x,0)
)=( f_1^o(x),C_1^o(x),c_1^o(x),c_2^o(x) ) ,
\label{1.19}\\
 p_f^\epsilon(x,0)= \chi_f^\epsilon(x) p^o(x), \quad
p^\epsilon(x,0)=\chi_m^\epsilon(x) p^o(x) . \label{1.20}
\end{gather}


Let us now enumerate the assumptions.
The  source term $q_s$ is  a nonnegative function of $L^q(\Omega \times J)$, $q>2$,  and
$$
\alpha \hat c_1 + \beta \hat C_1=\hat f_1, \quad
0 \le \hat f_1 \le 1, \quad
\hat c_1 + \hat c_2 =1.
$$
 As we assume a periodic structure in the reservoir,
the porosities
$(\phi_f^\epsilon(x),\phi^{\epsilon}(x))=(\phi_f(\frac{x}{\epsilon}),
\phi (\frac{x}{\epsilon }))$ and the permeabilities
$(k_f^\epsilon(x),k^{\epsilon}(x))=(k_f(\frac{x}{\epsilon}),
 k(\frac{x}{\epsilon}))$ of the fracture and of the matrix are periodic
of period $(\epsilon Y_f,\epsilon Y_m)$. These  quantities are
assumed to be smooth and bounded, but globally they are
discontinuous across $\Gamma_{fm}^{\epsilon}$.
 We assume moreover
$$
0 < \phi_- \le \phi_f(x),\ \phi(x) \le \phi_-^{-1}, \quad
k_- |\xi|^2 \le k_f(x)\xi \cdot \xi, \quad  k(x)\xi \cdot \xi
\le k_-^{-1} |\xi|^2,
$$
$k_- >0$, a.e. in $\Omega$, for all $\xi \in \mathbb{R}^3$.
The viscosity $\mu \in W^{1,\infty}(\Omega \times (0,1))$ is such that
$$
0 < \mu_- \le \mu(x,c) \le \mu_+ \  \forall c \in (0,1), \quad
\mu(x,c)=\mu \in \mathbb{R}_+^* \quad  \text{in }  \Omega_0.
$$
For sake of simplicity we have assumed that the viscosity is
constant  in $\Omega_0$. We then can pass to the limit in
$\Omega_0$ without introducing a dilation operator (see
\cite{EJDE} Section 4 for the details). The tensor $\mathcal{D}$
is already defined in (\ref{1.3}). The tensor
$\mathcal{D}^\epsilon$ has a similar structure but its diffusive
part $(\alpha + \beta \epsilon^2)D_m Id$ contains the proportions
of slowly and rapidly varying flows in the matrix. The main
property of these tensors is
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
\mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon) \xi \cdot \xi \ge \phi_-
(D_m + \alpha_t \vert \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \vert  ) \vert \xi
\vert^2  , \quad  \forall \xi \in \mathbb{R}^3,
\\
  \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \xi
\cdot \xi \ge \phi_- (D_m (\alpha +\beta \epsilon^2) + \alpha_t
\vert \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon + \epsilon^2
\underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon \vert  ) \vert \xi \vert^2  ,
\quad  \forall \xi \in \mathbb{R}^3.
\end{gathered}
\label{1.21}
\end{equation}
We assume that $p^o$ belongs to $H^1(\Omega)$, and that
$(f_1^o,C_1^o,c_1^o,c_2^o) \in (L^\infty(\Omega))^4$ satisfies
\begin{gather}
 0 \le f_1^o(x) \le 1 \  \text{a.e.\  in}\  \Omega,
\label{1.22}\\
\gamma_- \le c_1^o(x) \le \gamma_+, \ (\gamma_-,\gamma_+) \in \mathbb{R}^2, \  \text{a.e.\  in}\  \Omega,
\label{1.22bis} \\
\alpha c_1^o(x)+ \beta C_1^o(x) = \chi_m^\epsilon f_1^o (x) , \
0 \le c_1^o(x)+c_2^o(x) \le 1 \  \text{a.e.\  in}\
\Omega_m^\epsilon.
\label{1.23}
\end{gather}

The main result of the paper is the following.

\begin{theorem}
As the scaling parameter $\epsilon$ tends to zero, the microscopic model (\ref{1.4})-(\ref{1.20}) converges to the following macroscopic model.
 The homogenized pressure problem is
\begin{gather*}
\bigl( \overline{\phi_f}^{Y_f} + \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}
\overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \bigr) \,    \partial_tp_f - \mathop{\rm
div} \Bigl(\frac{\overline{K}^H_\alpha}{\mu(f_1)}  \nabla p_f
\Bigr) = q_s - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m}\phi \,  \partial_t p^0
\, dy \quad \text{in }\Omega \times J,
\\
\phi(y) \partial_t p^0 + \mathop{\rm div}_y
(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^0)=q_s, \
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^0=-\frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)} \quad \text{in }\Omega_0 \times Y_m \times J,
\\
 p_f(x,t)=p^0(x,y,t) \quad  \text{if }
  y \in \Gamma_{fm},\  (x,t) \in  \Omega \times J,
\\
  \overline{K}_\alpha^H  \nabla p_f  \cdot \nu
= 0 \ \text{on}\ \partial \Omega \times J, \  p_f(x,0)= p^0(x,y,0)
= p^o(x) \quad  \text{in }\Omega \times Y_m .
\end{gather*}
The homogenized concentrations problem is in $\Omega \times J$:
\begin{align*}
&\overline{\phi_f}^{Y_f} \partial_t f_1
+ \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{1}{\beta}  \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \partial_t C_1
+ \chi_{ \Omega_0} \frac{1}{\beta} \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) \, \partial_t C_1^0 dy
 \\
&- \frac{K^H_{Y_f}}{\mu(f_1)} \nabla p_f \cdot \nabla f_1
- \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{K^H_{Y_m}}{\beta \mu(f_1)} \nabla p_f \cdot \nabla C_1
- \frac{ \chi_{\Omega_0}}{\beta} \Bigl( \int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y C_1^0 \, dy \Bigr)
 \\
&- \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_f (\nabla p_f) \nabla f_1 )
-\chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{1}{\beta}  \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_m (\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1 )
\\
&= q_s \vert Y_f \vert \, (\hat f_1 - f_1)
+ \frac{1}{\beta} q_s \, \Bigl( \hat C_1 - \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \vert Y_m \vert \, C_1 - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} C_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy
\Bigr),
\end{align*}
\begin{align*}
& \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \partial_t c_1
+  \chi_{ \Omega_0}  \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) \, \partial_t c_1^0 dy
- \frac{\alpha}{\beta}  \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \partial_t C_1
\\
&-  \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \chi_{ \Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) \, \partial_t C_1^0 dy
- \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{K^H_{Y_m}}{\mu(f_1)} \nabla p_f \cdot \bigl( \nabla c_1 - \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \nabla C_1 \bigr)
\\
&- \chi_{\Omega_0}  \int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \bigl( \nabla_y c_1^0 - \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \nabla_y C_1^0 \bigr) \, dy
\\
&-\chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_m (\nabla p_f) \nabla c_1 )
+ \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_m (\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1 )
\\
&= q_s  \, \Bigl( \hat c_1 - \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \vert Y_m \vert \, c_1 - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} c_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy \Bigr)
\\
&\quad - \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \, q_s  \, \Bigl( \hat C_1 - \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \vert Y_m \vert \, C_1 - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} C_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy \Bigr)
,
\end{align*}
and in $\Omega_0 \times Y_m \times J$
\begin{gather*}
 \phi(y) \partial_t C_1^0
- \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y C_1^0
- \mathop{\rm div}_y \bigl( \mathcal{D}(\frac{k(y)}{\mu}\nabla_y p^0) \nabla_y C_1^0 \bigr)
= q_s \, (\hat C_1 - C_1^0),
\\
 \phi(y) \partial_t c_1^0
- \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y c_1^0
- \mathop{\rm div}_y \bigl( \mathcal{D}(\frac{k(y)}{\mu}\nabla_y p^0) \nabla_y c_1^0 \bigr)
= q_s \, (\hat c_1 - c_1^0),
\end{gather*}
completed by
\begin{gather*}
 \bigl( \mathcal{D}^H_f(\nabla p_f) \nabla f_1 - \frac{1}{\beta} \mathcal{D}^H_m(\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1
\bigr) \cdot \nu \big|_{\Gamma \times J} =0 ,
\\
  \bigl( \mathcal{D}^H_m(\nabla p_f) \nabla c_1 - \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \mathcal{D}^H_m(\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1 \bigr) \cdot \nu \big|_{\Gamma \times J} =0 ,
\\
 f_1\big|_{t=0}=f_1^o, \quad
c_1\big|_{t=0}=c_1^0\big|_{t=0}=c_1^o,\quad
C_1\big|_{t=0}=C_1^0\big|_{t=0}=C_1^o,
\\
f_1=\alpha c_1 + \beta C_1  \text{ a.e.   in }  \Omega \times J, \quad
f_1=\beta C_1^0   \text{ a.e.   in }  \Omega_0 \times \Gamma_{fm} \times J.
\end{gather*}
The homogenized quantities $\overline K^H_\alpha$, $\mathcal{D}^H_f$ and $\mathcal{D}^H_m$ are defined in (\ref{3.3}), (\ref{3.17}) and (\ref{3.18}) below.
\end{theorem}


The homogenization process then
leads to a macroscopic model containing both single porosity and
double porosity characteristics.
We show that the
double  porosity part of the model almost disappears as soon as a
direct flow occurs in the matrix (see the equations in $\Omega \setminus \Omega_0$).
It emphasizes in particular the
role of the dispersion tensor which models all the velocities
heterogeneity at the microscopic level. It is characteristic of a
miscible flow (see \cite{And} and the references therein).
The result is thus quite different of the one obtained in \cite{DS,Sho}.
Nevertheless, even in    $\Omega \setminus \Omega_0$, the model captures
the interactions between the matrix and the fractured part.
Indeed, the homogenized permeability and diffusion tensors strongly depend on the transmission function $\alpha$.
 One could compare this effects with some models
where the permeability is concentration dependent:  propagation in
clays (see \cite{Kac} and the references therein)  or blood flow
in micro vessels (see \cite{Sug} and the references therein) for
instance.
And in the subset $\Omega_0$ where no direct transmission occurs,
the model is of double porosity type.

This paper is organized as follows. Section 2 is devoted to the
analysis of the microscopic model. We derive uniform estimates for
the solutions. Convergence results are stated using two-scale
convergence techniques, convexity arguments and classical
compactness tools. In Section 3, we pass to the limit $\epsilon
\to 0$ and we get the homogenized model described in Theorem 1.1.

\section{Analysis of the microscopic model}


The existence of weak solutions for the problem
\eqref{1.4}-\eqref{1.20} is proved in \cite{EJDE}.
The proof is of course inspired by the statement of the existence of solutions for Problem  (\ref{1.1})-(\ref{1.2}) in a homogeneous porous medium (see \cite{Cho3}).
But the decomposition of the flow in the matrix part of the domain induces  additional difficulties.
Appropriate concentrations spaces for the problem are introduced following \cite{Sho}:
$H^\epsilon$ is the Hilbert space $H^\epsilon=L^2(\Omega_f^\epsilon) \times
L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon) \times L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon)$ with the inner product
\begin{align*}
& \bigl( [u_f,u_m,U_m],[\psi_f,\psi_m,\Psi_m]
\bigr)_{H^\epsilon}\\
&= \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} u_f(x) \, \psi_f(x) \, dx
 +  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} u_m(x) \, \psi_m(x) \,
dx +  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} U_m(x) \, \Psi_m(x) \, dx,
\end{align*}
and $V^\epsilon$ is the  Banach space
\begin{align*}
V^\epsilon &= H^\epsilon \cap  \big\{ (u_f,u_m,U_m) \in
H^1(\Omega_f^\epsilon) \times  H^1(\Omega_m^\epsilon)  \times
H^1(\Omega_m^\epsilon)  ; \\
&\quad \gamma_f^\epsilon u_f = \alpha \gamma_m^\epsilon u_m +
\beta \gamma_m^\epsilon U_m \  \text{on}\  \Gamma_{fm}^\epsilon
\big\}
\end{align*}
endowed with the norm
\begin{align*}
\Vert  (u_f,u_m,U_m) \Vert_{V^\epsilon}
& = \Vert \chi_f^\epsilon
u_f \Vert_{L^2(\Omega)} + \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon u_m
\Vert_{L^2(\Omega)} + \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon U_m
\Vert_{L^2(\Omega)}\\
& \quad + \Vert \chi_f^\epsilon \nabla u_f
\Vert_{(L^2(\Omega))^3} + \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon \nabla u_m
\Vert_{(L^2(\Omega))^3}  + \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon \nabla U_m
\Vert_{(L^2(\Omega))^3} ,
\end{align*}
where $\gamma_j^\epsilon \, : H^1(\Omega_j^\epsilon) \to L^2(\partial \Omega_j^\epsilon)$ is the usual trace map and $\chi_j^\epsilon$ is the characteristic function associated with $\Omega_j^\epsilon$, $j=f,m$.
We also introduce the Banach space $V^\epsilon_c$
\begin{gather*}
V^\epsilon_c = L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon) \times
L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon) \cap  \big\{ (u_1,u_2) \in
 H^1(\Omega_m^\epsilon)  \times H^1(\Omega_m^\epsilon)  ; \\
 \alpha= \alpha \gamma_m^\epsilon (u_1 +u_2) \  \text{on}\  \Gamma_{fm}^\epsilon
\big\}
\end{gather*}
endowed with the norm
\[
\Vert  (u_1,u_2) \Vert_{V^\epsilon_c}
 =  \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon u_1
\Vert_{L^2(\Omega)} + \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon u_2 \Vert_{L^2(\Omega)}
 +  \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon \nabla u_1 \Vert_{(L^2(\Omega))^3}
 + \Vert \chi_m^\epsilon \nabla u_2
\Vert_{(L^2(\Omega))^3} .
\]
We  note that for any fixed $\epsilon >0$, the problem is of parabolic type.
Then,  adapting the proof of \cite{Cho3} to the present piecewise structure,
one can state the following existence result (see \cite{EJDE} for a
detailed proof).


\begin{theorem} \label{thm1}
Let $0<\epsilon <1$. There exists a solution
$(p_f^{\epsilon},p^\epsilon,f_1^\epsilon,c_1^{\epsilon},
C_1^{\epsilon},c_2^{\epsilon})$ of Problem
\eqref{1.4}-\eqref{1.20} in the
following sense.

\noindent (i) The pressure part $(p_f^\epsilon,p^{\epsilon})$
belongs
 to  $L^{2}(J;H^1(\Omega_f^\epsilon)) \times L^{2}(J;H^1(\Omega_m^\epsilon))$
 and is a weak solution of \eqref{1.5}, \eqref{1.9}-\eqref{1.10},
\eqref{1.15}, \eqref{1.18} and \eqref{1.20}.
 Indeed, for any function $\psi \in \mathcal{C}^1(J;H^1(\Omega))$ such that $\psi\mid_{t=T}=0$,
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&- \int_{\Omega \times J} (\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon p^\epsilon_f
 + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon p^\epsilon) \partial_t \psi \\
&+ \int_{\Omega \times J} \bigl( \chi_f^\epsilon
  \frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)}  \nabla p_f^\epsilon
  + \chi_m^\epsilon (\alpha (c_1^\epsilon +c_2^\epsilon)(1-\epsilon^2)
  + \epsilon^2  )\frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)}
  \nabla p_\epsilon \bigr) \cdot \nabla \psi\\
&=  - \int_\Omega (\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon
  + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon ) p^o \psi(x,0)
+ \int_{\Omega \times J} q_s  \psi  .
\end{aligned} \label{2.1}
\end{equation}

\noindent(ii) The concentration part
$(f_1^\epsilon,c_1^{\epsilon},C_1^{\epsilon},c_2^{\epsilon})$ is such that
$( f_1^\epsilon,c_1^{\epsilon},C_1^{\epsilon}) \in L^2(J;V^\epsilon)
\cap H^1(J;(V^\epsilon)')$ and
 $ (c_1^\epsilon, c_2^{\epsilon}) \in L^2(J;V\epsilon_c)
\cap H^1(J;(V^\epsilon_c)')$.
It satisfies for  any test functions $(d_f,d_1,D_1)  \in L^2(J;V^\epsilon)$ and
 $d_2  \in L^2(J;H^1(\Omega_m^\epsilon))$ the following relations.
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
& \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} \phi_f^\epsilon \partial_t f_1^\epsilon\,d_f
  + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \phi^\epsilon \partial_t c_1^\epsilon\,d_1
  + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \phi^\epsilon \partial_t C_1^\epsilon
  D_1
  + \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J}( \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \cdot
 \nabla f_1^\epsilon)\, d_f
 \\
& + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon \cdot ( d_1 \nabla c_1^\epsilon
  + D_1 \nabla C_1^\epsilon)
 + \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}( \underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla f_1^\epsilon \cdot \nabla d_f
 \\
& + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}^\epsilon( \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \nabla c_1^\epsilon \cdot \nabla d_1
 + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}^\epsilon( \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \nabla C_1^\epsilon \cdot \nabla D_1
 \\
& = \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} q_s \, (\hat f_1-f_1^\epsilon)\, d_f
 + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} q_s \, (\hat c_1-c_1^\epsilon)\, d_1
 + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} q_s \, (\hat C_1-C_1^\epsilon)\, D_1 ,
\end{aligned} \label{2.2}
\end{equation}
and
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
&\int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \phi^\epsilon \partial_t c_2^\epsilon
\, d_2
+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}( \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon
\cdot \nabla c_2^\epsilon)\, d_2
+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}^
\epsilon( \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \nabla c_2^\epsilon
\cdot \nabla d_2
 \\
&
 - \int_{\partial \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} (\mathcal{D}^\epsilon
( \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon ) \nabla c_2^\epsilon \cdot \nu_m)\,
 \gamma_m^\epsilon d_2\\
&=  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} q_s \, (1-c_2^\epsilon)\, d_2  .
\end{aligned} \label{2.3}
\end{equation}
Furthermore, the following maximum principles hold:
\begin{gather}
 0 \le f_1^\epsilon(x,t) \le \hat f_1 \quad \text{a.e.  in }
  \Omega_f^\epsilon \times J,  \label{2.5} \\
 0 \le m_1^\epsilon(x,t) \le \hat f_1 , \   0 \le c_1^\epsilon(x,t) + c_2^\epsilon(x,t) \le 1 \quad  \text{a.e.  in }
   \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J,  \label{2.4} \\
  \gamma_- \le c_1^\epsilon(x,t) \le  \gamma_+ \quad  \text{a.e.  in }
   \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J.  \label{2.4bis}
\end{gather}
\end{theorem}

We now state some uniform estimates for the solutions of the microscopic system.
We begin by stating the following properties of the pressure solutions of
the problem \eqref{1.5}, \eqref{1.9}--\eqref{1.10}, \eqref{1.15}, \eqref{1.18}, \eqref{1.20}.
One of the main difficulties of the homogenization problem appears in the following lemma.
Indeed, letting $\epsilon$ to 0, Equation (\ref{1.9}) is of degenerate parabolic type because one can only ensure that $c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon \ge 0$.
It is a main difference with our former work in \cite{EJDE}.


\begin{lemma} \label{lem1}
The pressure satisfies the following uniform estimates
\begin{gather*}
 \Vert p_f^{\epsilon}\Vert_{L^\infty(J;L^q(\Omega_f^\epsilon ))}
 + \Vert p_f^{\epsilon}\Vert_{L^2(J;H^1(\Omega_f^\epsilon ))} \le C,
 \\
 \Vert \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \Vert_{(L^2(J;L^2(\Omega_f^\epsilon)))^2}
\le C,
 \\
 \Vert p^{\epsilon}\Vert_{L^\infty(J;L^q(\Omega_m^\epsilon ))}
 \le C,
\\
\Vert \alpha^{1/2} (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)^{1/2} \nabla p^\epsilon \Vert_{(L^2(J;L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon)))^3}
 + \Vert \epsilon  \nabla p^\epsilon \Vert_{(L^2(J;L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon)))^3}
 \le C,
 \\
 \Vert \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon
\Vert_{(L^2(J;L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon)))^3} \le C,
\\\
\Vert \underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon
\Vert_{(L^2(J;L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon)))^3} \le C.
\end{gather*}
Furthermore the time derivative
$(\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon \partial_t p_f^\epsilon
+ \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon \partial_t p^\epsilon)$ is
uniformly bounded in $L^2(J;(H^1(\Omega))')$.
\end{lemma}



\begin{proof}
The estimates are derived from integration by parts.
We multiply   \eqref{1.5} by $p_f^{\epsilon}$ and integrate over
$\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J$.
We multiply   \eqref{1.9} by $p^{\epsilon}$ and integrate over
$\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J$.
 Summing up the  resulting relations, we obtain
\begin{align*}
& \frac{1}{2} \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon}\phi_f^\epsilon\,
  \vert p_f^{\epsilon}\vert^2 \,  dx
+ \frac{1}{2} \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon}\phi^{\epsilon}\,
  \vert p^{\epsilon}\vert^2 \,  dx
+\int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} \frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)}
\nabla p_f^\epsilon \cdot \nabla p_f^\epsilon \, dxdt
\\
&+\int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}  \bigl( \alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)
 (1-\epsilon^2) + \epsilon^2 \bigr)\, \frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)}
  \nabla p^\epsilon \cdot \nabla p^\epsilon \, dxdt
\\
&= \frac{1}{2} \int_{\Omega} ( \chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon(x)
 + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^{\epsilon}(x))\,  \vert p^{o}(x)\vert^2  \,  dx
 +\int_{\Omega \times J} q_s \, (\chi_f^\epsilon p_f^{\epsilon}
 + \chi_m^\epsilon p^{\epsilon})\,  dxdt.
\end{align*}
Applying the Cauchy-Schwarz and Young inequalities with the properties
of $\phi_f^\epsilon$, $\phi^\epsilon$, $k_f^\epsilon$, $k^\epsilon$ and
 $\mu$ in the latter relation, we get
\begin{align*}
& \frac{\phi_-}{2} \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} \vert p_f^{\epsilon}\vert^2 \,  dx
+ \frac{\phi_-}{2} \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon}  \vert p^{\epsilon}\vert^2 \,  dx
+ \frac{k_-}{\mu_+} \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J}  \vert \nabla p_f^\epsilon \vert^2 \, dxdt
\\
&+ \frac{k_-}{\mu_+}
 \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \bigl(
  \alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)\, \vert \nabla p^\epsilon \vert^2
+   \epsilon^2 \, (1- \alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon))\,  \vert \nabla p^\epsilon \vert^2
\bigr)\, dxdt
\\
&\le C\bigl( \Vert p^o \Vert_{L^2(\Omega)}, \Vert q_s \Vert_{L^2
 (\Omega \times J)} \bigr)
+ \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} \vert p_f^{\epsilon}\vert^2 \,  dxdt
+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \vert p^{\epsilon}\vert^2 \,  dxdt.
\end{align*}
Using the Gronwall lemma, we prove the desired estimates, but in $L^2$ instead of $L^q$. The
result on the time derivatives then follows straightforward  from
 \eqref{1.5}, \eqref{1.9}-\eqref{1.10}.
 It remains to show that the pressure is uniformly bounded
in $L^\infty(J;L^q(\Omega))$.
 Let $\eta>0$.
 We multiply Eq. (\ref{1.5}) (respectively (\ref{1.9})) by
$qp_f^\epsilon({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2-1}$ (resp.
$qp^\epsilon({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2-1}$) and we integrate by parts
over $\Omega_f^\epsilon$ (resp. $\Omega_m^\epsilon$).
 We obtain
 \begin{align*}
 & \frac{d}{dt} \int_\Omega \bigl( \chi^\epsilon_f ({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2} + \chi^\epsilon_m ({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2} \bigr)
 + \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} \frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)} ({p_f^\epsilon}^2 +\eta)^{q/2-1} \nabla p_f^\epsilon \cdot \nabla p_f^\epsilon
 \\
 &
 + \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} \frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)} q {p_f^\epsilon}^2 ({p_f^\epsilon}^2 +\eta)^{q/2-2} \nabla p_f^\epsilon \cdot \nabla p_f^\epsilon
 \\
 &
 + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} (\alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) (1-\epsilon^2)+\epsilon^2)\frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)} ({p^\epsilon}^2 +\eta)^{q/2-1} \nabla p^\epsilon \cdot \nabla p^\epsilon
 \\
 &
 +  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} (\alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) (1-\epsilon^2)+\epsilon^2)\frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)}  q {p^\epsilon}^2 ({p^\epsilon}^2 +\eta)^{q/2-2} \nabla p^\epsilon \cdot \nabla p^\epsilon
 \\
 &
 = \int_\Omega q_s q \bigl( \chi^\epsilon_f p_f^\epsilon({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2-1} + \chi^\epsilon_m p^\epsilon({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2-1} \bigr) .
 \end{align*}
 The four last terms of the left hand side of the latter relation are nonnegative.
 The right hand side term is estimated as follows using the H\"older inequality.
 \begin{align*}
 & \Bigl\vert \int_\Omega q_s q \bigl( \chi^\epsilon_f p_f^\epsilon({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2-1} + \chi^\epsilon_m p^\epsilon({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2-1} \bigr) \Bigr\vert
 \\
 &
 \le  C \int_\Omega \vert q_s \vert \, \bigl(  \chi^\epsilon_f ({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{(q-1)/2} + \chi^\epsilon_m ({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{(q-1)/2} \bigr)
 \\
 &
 \le C \Bigl( \int_\Omega \chi^\epsilon_f ({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2} + \chi^\epsilon_m ({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2} \Bigr)^{(q-1)/q}
 \Bigl( \int_\Omega \vert q_s \vert^q \Bigr)^{1/q}
 \\
 &
 \le C \Bigl( \int_\Omega \chi^\epsilon_f ({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2} + \chi^\epsilon_m ({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{q/2} \Bigr)^{(q-1)/q} .
 \end{align*}
 We conclude with the Gronwall lemma that
$\chi^\epsilon_f ({p_f^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{1/2}
+ \chi^\epsilon_m ({p^\epsilon}^2+\eta)^{1/2}$ is uniformly bounded in
$L^\infty(J;L^q(\Omega))$.
 It follows that
$\chi^\epsilon_f {p_f^\epsilon}+ \chi^\epsilon_m {p^\epsilon}$
 is also uniformly bounded in $L^\infty(J;L^q(\Omega))$.
\end{proof}

We  now establish the following results concerning the
concentrations functions $(f_1^{\epsilon},
C_1^\epsilon,c_1^\epsilon,c_2^\epsilon)$.

\begin{lemma} \label{lem2}
\begin{itemize}
\item[(i)] The functions $(f_1^{\epsilon},C_1^\epsilon,
c_1^\epsilon,c_2^\epsilon)$
are uniformly bounded in the space
$L^{\infty}(J;L^2(\Omega_f^\epsilon)) \times (L^{\infty}
(J;L^2(\Omega_f^\epsilon)))^3$ and are such that
\begin{gather*}
 0 \le f_1^{\epsilon}(x,t) \le \hat f_1 \le 1 \quad
\text{ almost   everywhere   in }   \Omega_f^\epsilon \times J ,\\
 0 \le \alpha c_1^{\epsilon}(x,t) + \beta C_1^\epsilon(x,t) \le \hat f_1
\le 1 \quad \text{ almost   everywhere  in   }     \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J \\
 0 \le  c_1^{\epsilon}(x,t) + c_2^\epsilon(x,t) \le 1 \quad
\text{ almost   everywhere  in   }     \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J ,\\
\gamma_- \le c_1^\epsilon(x,t) \le \gamma_+  \quad
\text{ almost   everywhere  in   }     \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J;
\end{gather*}
\item[(ii)] the sequence
 $( (D_m^{1/2}+\alpha_t^{1/2} \vert \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \vert^{1/2})
 \nabla  f_1^{\epsilon})$ is uniformly bounded in
$(L^2(\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J ))^3$;

\item[(iii)] for $i=1,2$, the diffusive terms
$\alpha^{1/2} (1+ (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)^{1/2} \vert \nabla p^\epsilon
\vert^{1/2} )\nabla c_i^\epsilon$ and
$\epsilon ( 1 +  \vert \epsilon \nabla p^\epsilon \vert^{1/2} )
\nabla c_i^\epsilon $
are uniformly  bounded in $(L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J ))^3$.
The same estimates hold for $C_1^\epsilon$.
\end{itemize}
\end{lemma}


\begin{proof}
The maximum principles of {\it (i)} are a direct consequence of
the construction of the solution $(f_1^{\epsilon},
C_1^\epsilon,c_1^\epsilon,c_2^\epsilon)$ in Theorem \ref{thm1}.
We write the variational formulation (\ref{2.2}) with the test
function $(d_f,d_1,D_1)=(f_1^\epsilon,c_1^\epsilon,C_1^\epsilon)$.
We get
\begin{align}
&\frac{1}{2} \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} \phi_f^\epsilon \vert f_1^\epsilon \vert^2 \, dx
+  \frac{1}{2} \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} \phi^\epsilon ( \vert   c_1^\epsilon \vert^2 + \vert  C_1^\epsilon \vert^2 ) \, dx
+ \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_f^\epsilon ) \nabla f_1^\epsilon \cdot \nabla f_1^\epsilon \, dx\,dt
\nonumber  \\
&+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}  (\mathcal{D}^\epsilon (\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon) \nabla  c_1^\epsilon  \cdot  \nabla   c_1^\epsilon +  \mathcal{D}^\epsilon (\underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon) \nabla  C_1^\epsilon  \cdot  \nabla   C_1^\epsilon )\, dx\,dt
\nonumber  \\
&+  \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} ( \underline{v}_f^\epsilon  \cdot \nabla f_1^\epsilon)\, f_1^\epsilon \, dx\,dt
+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon \cdot ( c_1^\epsilon\,  \nabla   c_1^\epsilon  +   C_1^\epsilon\, \nabla   C_1^\epsilon )  \, dx\,dt
\nonumber  \\
&+  \int_{\Omega \times J} q_s \,(\chi_f^\epsilon  \vert f^\epsilon_1\vert^2
 + \chi_m^\epsilon\,  (\vert c^\epsilon_1\vert^2
 + \vert C^\epsilon_1\vert^2 ) ) \, dx\,dt   \label{2.6} \\
&= \int_{\Omega  \times J} q_s  \hat f_1 f^\epsilon_1 \, dx\,dt
+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon  \times J} q_s  (\hat c_1 c^\epsilon_1
 +  \hat C_1 C^\epsilon_1  ) \, dx\, dt \nonumber\\
&\quad + \frac{1}{2} \int_{\Omega} \bigl(  \phi_f^\epsilon \vert f_1^o \vert^2
+\phi^\epsilon ( \vert   c_1^o \vert^2 + \vert  C_1^o \vert^2 )\bigr) dx.
\nonumber
\end{align}
The convective terms in (\ref{2.6}) are estimated as follows using the
Cauchy-Schwarz and Young inequalities.
In the fractured part, we write
\[
\Bigl\vert  \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} ( \underline{v}_f^\epsilon
 \cdot \nabla f_1^\epsilon)\, f_1^\epsilon \, dx \Bigr\vert
\le
\int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J}  \frac{ \alpha_t}{2} \vert \underline{v}_f^\epsilon\vert  \, \vert \nabla f_1^\epsilon \vert^2  \, dx
+ C \Vert f_1^\epsilon \Vert_\infty^2 \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon}  \vert \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \vert  \, dx,
\]
where $0 \le f_1^\epsilon(x,t) \le 1$ a.e. in $\Omega_f^\epsilon
\times J$  and $\underline{v}_f^\epsilon$ is uniformly bounded in
$(L^1(\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J))^3$ thanks to Lemma \ref{lem1}.
In the matrix part, we get firstly
\begin{align*}
 \Bigl\vert \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \underline{\mathcal{V}}^\epsilon
 \cdot ( c_1^\epsilon\,  \nabla   c_1^\epsilon
 +   C_1^\epsilon\, \nabla   C_1^\epsilon )  \Bigr\vert
&\le
\int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}  \frac{ \alpha_t}{2} \vert
 \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon +\epsilon^2
 \underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon  \vert \, (\vert  \nabla
  c_1^\epsilon \vert^2 + \vert \nabla C_1^\epsilon \vert^2 )
\\
&\quad + C \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon}( \vert
  \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon
  \vert +\vert \underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon \vert) \, (\vert
c_1^\epsilon \vert^2+ \vert C_1^\epsilon \vert^2 )\, dx .
\end{align*}
The second term of the right-hand side of the latter relation is
 treated as follows using  Lemma \ref{lem1}.
\begin{align*}
&\int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} \vert  \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon +  \underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon\vert \,
(\vert  c_1^\epsilon \vert^2+ \vert C_1^\epsilon \vert^2 )\\
&\le \frac{k_+}{\mu_-}
\int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} \bigl( \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)
(1-\epsilon)+ \epsilon \bigr) \vert \nabla p^\epsilon\vert \,
\bigl( \vert c_1^\epsilon\vert^2 + \vert C_1^\epsilon\vert^2 \bigr)
\\
&\le C \Bigl(  \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon}
 \bigl( \alpha^2(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)^2
 + \epsilon^2 (1-\alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) \bigr)^2
  \vert \nabla p^\epsilon\vert^2  \Bigr)^{1/2}
\\
&\times
  \bigl( \Vert c_1^\epsilon \Vert_{L^\infty(\Omega_m^\epsilon )}^2
  + \Vert C_1^\epsilon \Vert_{L^\infty(\Omega_m^\epsilon )}^2  \bigr) \\
& \le \frac{C}{\delta} \bigl( \Vert c_1^\epsilon
 \Vert_{L^\infty(\Omega_m^\epsilon )}^2 + \Vert C_1^\epsilon
 \Vert_{L^\infty(\Omega_m^\epsilon )}^2 \bigr)
+ \phi_-\delta  \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon} (\alpha + \epsilon^2)
 D_m \bigl( \vert \nabla c_1^\epsilon \vert^2
 + \vert \nabla C_1^\epsilon \vert^2 \bigr)  ,
\end{align*}
for any $\delta >0$.
The  last term in the left-hand side of (\ref{2.6}) is nonnegative.
Using the latter estimates, the Cauchy-Schwarz and Young inequalities
for the right-hand side source terms  and the basic properties (\ref{1.21})
 of the tensors $\mathcal{D}$ and $\mathcal{D}^\epsilon$, it follows
from (\ref{2.6}) that
\begin{align*}
&\frac{\phi_-}{2} \int_{\Omega}(  \chi_f^\epsilon \vert f_1^\epsilon \vert^2
 + \chi_m^\epsilon  (\vert   c_1^\epsilon \vert^2+ \vert C_1^\epsilon \vert^2))
 \, dx
+ \phi_- \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon  \times J}  (D_m +\frac{ \alpha_t}{2}
 \vert \underline{v}_f^\epsilon\vert  ) \, \vert \nabla f_1^\epsilon \vert^2
  \, dxdt
\\
&+ \phi_- \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon  \times J}  ((\alpha + \epsilon^2 )(1-\delta)D_m +\frac{ \alpha_t}{2}  \vert  \underline{\mathcal{V}}_s^\epsilon + \epsilon^2 \underline{\mathcal{V}}_h^\epsilon \vert  ) \, \bigl( \vert \nabla c_1^\epsilon \vert^2  + \vert \nabla C_1^\epsilon \vert^2 \bigr) \, dxdt
\\
&\le \frac{C}{\delta} + C  \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J}  \vert f_1^\epsilon \vert^2
 \, dxdt  .
\end{align*}
We choose $0 < \delta < 1$.
We  use the Gronwall lemma to infer from the latter relation that
$\sqrt{\alpha + \beta \epsilon^2} \nabla c_1^\epsilon$ and $\vert \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) + \epsilon^3(1- \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) )\nabla p^\epsilon \vert^{1/2} \nabla c_1^\epsilon$ are uniformly bounded in $(L^2(\Omega \times J))^3$.
The estimates for $f_1^\epsilon$, $c_1^\epsilon$ and $C_1^\epsilon$ follow.
Once we know the estimate for $c_1^\epsilon$, we obtain similar ones
for $c_2^\epsilon$ by multiplying   (\ref{1.7}) by $c_1^\epsilon$,
(\ref{1.8}) by $c_2^\epsilon$, integrating over $\Omega_m^\epsilon$
and summing up the results to kill the terms on $\Gamma_{fm}^\epsilon$.
 Our claim is proved.
\end{proof}



We now have sufficient estimates to state the first convergence result.
The proof of the homogenization process will be carried out by using the
 two-scale convergence  introduced by G.Nguetseng in \cite{Ng} and
developed  by Allaire in \cite{A}.
The basic definition and properties of this concept follow.

\begin{proposition} \label{prop1}
A sequence of functions $(v^{\epsilon})$ bounded in $L^2(\Omega \times J )$
two-scale converges to a limit  $v^o(x,y,t)$ belonging to
$L^2(\Omega  \times  Y \times J )$,
$v^\epsilon {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}  v^o$,  if
$$
\lim_{\epsilon \to 0}\int_{\Omega \times J}v^{\epsilon}(x,t)\,
 \Psi (x,x/\epsilon,t) \,  dxdt
=\int_{\Omega \times J}\int_{Y}v^o(x,y,t)\,  \Psi(x,y,t)\,  dxdydt,
$$
for any test function  $\Psi(x,y,t)$, Y-periodic in the second variable,
satisfying
$$
\lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \int_{\Omega \times J} \vert \Psi (x,x/\epsilon,t)
\vert^2\,  dxdt
= \int_{\Omega \times J} \int_Y |\Psi(x,y,t)|^2\,  dxdydt .
$$
(i) From each bounded sequence $ (v^{\epsilon} )$ in  $L^2 (\Omega \times J )$
one can extract a subsequence which  two-scale converges.

\noindent (ii)
Let $ (v^{\epsilon} )$ be a bounded sequence in  $L^2(J;H^1 (\Omega  ))$
which converges weakly to $v$ in  $L^2(J;H^1 (\Omega  ))$.
Then  $ v^{\epsilon}   {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}} v$  and there exists
a function $v^1 \in L^2 (\Omega \times J;H_{per}^1 (Y ) )$ such that,
up to a subsequence,
$ \nabla v^{\epsilon}  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}  \nabla v (x,t )
+ \nabla_y v^1 (x,y,t )$.

\noindent(iii) Let $ (v^{\epsilon} )$ be a bounded sequence in
$L^2 (\Omega \times J )$ with $(\epsilon \nabla  v^{\epsilon} )$ bounded
in $(L^2 (\Omega \times J ))^3$.
 Then, there exists a function $v^o \in L^2 (\Omega \times  J;H_{per}^1 (Y ) )$
such that, up to a subsequence,
$ v^{\epsilon}   {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}} v^o$ and
$\epsilon \nabla  v^{\epsilon}  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}
\nabla_y v^o (x,y,t )$.
\end{proposition}


Before applying these results, we have to extend some functions to
the  whole domain $\Omega$. We begin by defining a global pressure
$\theta^\epsilon$ by
$$
\theta^\epsilon=\chi_f^\epsilon p_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon p^\epsilon.
$$
We have assumed that the  connected sets $\Omega_f^\epsilon$ and $\Omega_m^\epsilon$ have the admissible structure to apply the results of \cite{Acer}.
We thus claim that, for $j=f,m$, there exists three constants $k^j_i=k_i^j(Y_j) >0 $, $i=1,2,3$, and a linear and continuous extension operator
$ \Pi^\epsilon_j  : H^1(\Omega_j^\epsilon) \to H_{loc}^1(\Omega) $
 such that $\Pi^\epsilon_j v =v$ a.e. in $\Omega_j^\epsilon$ and
$$
 \int_{\Omega (\epsilon k_1)} |\Pi^\epsilon_j v|^2\,  dx  \le k_2
\int_{\Omega_j^\epsilon}|v|^2\,  dx ,
 \quad
 \int_{\Omega (\epsilon k_1)} |\nabla (\Pi^\epsilon_j  v)|^2\,  dx
\le  k_3 \int_{\Omega_j^\epsilon}|\nabla v|^2\,  dx
$$
for all $v \in H^1(\Omega_j^\epsilon)$, with $\Omega (\epsilon
k_1) =\lbrace x \in \Omega   \mid \mathop{\rm dist}(x, \Gamma) >
\epsilon k_1 \rbrace $. To avoid dealing with boundary layers, we
make the following additional assumption on the structure of the
domain $\Omega$:
$$
\Omega_m^\epsilon =\Omega (\epsilon k_1) \cap \bigl\lbrace
  \cup_{k \in \mathbb{Z}^3} \epsilon \left(Y_m +k \right) \bigr\rbrace
\quad \text{and} \quad \Omega_f^\epsilon = \Omega \setminus
\overline{\Omega_m^\epsilon}.
$$
We then define the extension $C^\epsilon$ of
$$c^\epsilon=c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon $$ by
$$ C^\epsilon = \Pi^\epsilon_m c^\epsilon$$
and the extension of $p^\epsilon_f$ by
$P^\epsilon_f = \Pi^\epsilon_f p^\epsilon_f$.

Now, in view of Lemmas \ref{lem1}  and \ref{lem2},  there exist functions $p_f \in  L^2(J; H^1(\Omega))$, $p_f^1 \in L^2(\Omega \times J;H^1_{per}(Y)) $, $p^0 \in L^2(\Omega \times J;H^1_{per}(Y))$,
 $(f_1,C_1,c_1,c_2) \in (L^\infty(J;L^2(\Omega)) \cap L^2(J; H^1(\Omega)))^4$, $(c_1^0,C_1^0) \in (L^2(\Omega \times J;H^1_{per}(Y)))^2$
and $(f_1^1,C_1^1,c_1^1,c_2^1) \in (L^2(\Omega \times J;H^1_{per}(Y)))^4$
such that, up to extracted subsequences, as $\varepsilon \to 0$,
\begin{gather*}
 \theta^\epsilon=\chi_f^\epsilon p_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon p^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   p^0(x,y,t) = \chi_f(y) p_f(x,t) + \chi_m(y) p^0(x,y,t),
\\
P^\epsilon_f \rightharpoonup p_f \  \mathrm{weakly\  in} \  L^2(\Omega \times J),
\\
P_f^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\    p_f,\quad
 \nabla P_f^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \nabla p_f(x,t) + \nabla_y p_f^1(x,y,t),
\\
 \epsilon \nabla \theta^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) \nabla_y p^0(x,y,t),
\\
\alpha^{1/2} C^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \alpha^{1/2}(c_1+c_2),\quad
\alpha^{1/2} \nabla C^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \alpha^{1/2} \nabla(c_1+c_2) + \nabla_y(c_1^1+c_2^1),
\\
 \chi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_f(y) f_1,\quad
\chi_f^\epsilon \nabla f_1^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_f(y) (\nabla f_1(x,t) + \nabla_y f_1^1(x,y,t)),
\\
 \chi_m^\epsilon \alpha^{1/2} C_1^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) \alpha^{1/2} C_1,
 \\
\chi_m^\epsilon \alpha^{1/2} \nabla C_1^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) \alpha^{1/2} (\nabla C_1(x,t) + \nabla_y C_1^1(x,y,t)),
\\
 \chi_m^\epsilon  C_1^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) C_1^0(x,y,t), \
  \chi_m^\epsilon \epsilon \nabla C_1^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) \nabla_y C_1^0(x,y,t),
\\
 \chi_m^\epsilon \alpha^{1/2} c_i^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) \alpha^{1/2} c_i,\quad
\chi_m^\epsilon \alpha^{1/2} \nabla c_i^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) \alpha^{1/2} (\nabla c_i(x,t) + \nabla_y c_i^1(x,y,t)),
\\
 \chi_m^\epsilon  c_i^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) c_i^0(x,y,t), \
  \chi_m^\epsilon \epsilon \nabla c_i^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\   \chi_m(y) \nabla_y c_i^0(x,y,t),
\quad    i=1,2.
 \end{gather*}
 We note that
 \begin{gather*}
 C_1 = \int_Y C_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy, \  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} C_1 = \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \frac{1}{Y_m} \int_{Y_m}  C_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy,
 \\
 c_1 = \int_Y c_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy, \  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} c_1 = \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \frac{1}{Y_m} \int_{Y_m}  c_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy .
 \end{gather*}
 We also assert that
 \begin{gather*}
 \Phi^\epsilon = \chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \Phi(y)
= \chi_f(y)  \phi_f(y) + \chi_m(y) \phi(y),
\\
K^\epsilon  = \chi_f^\epsilon k_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon k^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  K(y)
= \chi_f(y)  k_f(y) + \chi_m(y)  k(y),
\end{gather*}
and that  $\Phi^\epsilon$ and $K^\epsilon$ are admissible
test functions for the two-scale convergence.


 Furthermore, some two-scale  limits are linked across the interface $\Gamma_{fm}$.
 We claim the following results.

  \begin{lemma} \label{lem3}
The two limit pressures are equal on the matrix-fracture interface:
 $$
p_f(x,t)=p^0(x,s,t)\  \mathrm{for} \  s \in  \Gamma_{fm},\   (x,t)
\in \Omega \times J.
 $$
  \end{lemma}

 \begin{proof}
 We recall that $\theta^\epsilon = \chi_f^\epsilon p_f^\epsilon
+ \chi_m^\epsilon p^\epsilon \in L^2(J;H^1(\Omega))$  satisfies
$\gamma_f^\epsilon \theta^\epsilon = \gamma_f^\epsilon p_f^\epsilon
= \gamma_m^\epsilon p^\epsilon = \gamma_m^\epsilon \theta^\epsilon$ and
$\epsilon \nabla \theta^\epsilon = \epsilon \chi_f^\epsilon \nabla p_f^\epsilon
+ \epsilon \chi_m^\epsilon \nabla p^\epsilon \in (L^2(\Omega \times J))^3$
for any fixed $\epsilon>0$.
 We know that $\theta^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \chi_f(y) p_f(x,t)
+ \chi_m(y) p^0(x,y,t)$ and $\epsilon \nabla \theta^\epsilon {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}  \chi_m(y) \nabla_y p^0(x,y,t)$.
 For any $\underline{\Psi} \in (\mathcal{C}_o^\infty(\Omega;\mathcal{C}_{per}^\infty(Y)))^3$ we write
 $$
\int_\Omega  \epsilon \nabla \theta^\epsilon \cdot \underline{\Psi}
(x,\frac{x}{\epsilon}) \, dx
 = - \int_\Omega \theta^\epsilon \Bigl( \epsilon \mathop{\rm div}_x
\underline{\Psi}(x,\frac{x}{\epsilon}) + \mathop{\rm div}_y
\underline{\Psi}(x,\frac{x}{\epsilon}) \Bigr) \, dx.
 $$
 We take the two-scale limits on both sides.
 We get
 \begin{align*}
&\int_\Omega \int_Y \chi_m(y) \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \underline{\Psi} \, dx
\\
& =- \int_\Omega \int_Y (\chi_f(y) p_f(x,t)
   + \chi_m(y) p^0(x,y,t) ) \, \mathop{\rm div}_y \underline{\Psi}(x,y) \, dxdy
 \\
&  =- \int_\Omega \int_{\partial Y_f} p_f(x,t) \underline{\Psi}(x,s)
  \cdot \nu_f \, dxds
 - \int_\Omega \int_{\partial Y_m} p^0(x,s,t) \underline{\Psi}(x,s)
 \cdot \nu_m \, dxds
 \\
 &\quad +  \int_\Omega \int_Y \chi_m(y) \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \underline{\Psi} \, dx  .
 \end{align*}
 This proves that $p_f(x,t)=p^0(x,s,t)$ for
$s \in \partial Y_f \cap \partial Y_m = \Gamma_{fm}$.
 \end{proof}

We add the following result linking the limit concentrations
$f_1$ and $m_1=\alpha c_1+\beta C_1$.
This lemma was already stated in \cite{Cho2} when $\alpha$ is a constant parameter.
By the way, we detail its proof for the convenience of the reader.

 \begin{lemma} \label{lem4}
 The concentrations $f_1(x,t)$ and $m_1(x,t)=\alpha c_1(x,t)+\beta C_1(x,t)$
are equal almost everywhere in $(\Omega \setminus \Omega_0) \times J$ and $f_1(x,t)=\beta C_1^0(x,s,t)$ for a.e. $(x,t) \in \Omega_0 \times J$, $s \in \Gamma_{fm}$.
Furthermore $\alpha(x) (c_1+c_2)(x,t)=\alpha(x)$ almost everywhere in $\Omega \times J$.
 \end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
 Let $d^\epsilon = \chi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon
\in L^2(J;H^1(\Omega))$.
 It satisfies $\gamma_f^\epsilon d^\epsilon = \gamma_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon
= \gamma_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon = \gamma_m^\epsilon d^\epsilon$ and
$\epsilon \nabla d^\epsilon = \epsilon \chi_f^\epsilon \nabla f_1^\epsilon
+ \epsilon \chi_m^\epsilon \nabla m_1^\epsilon \in (L^2(\Omega \times J))^3$.
 We know that $d^\epsilon\  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \chi_f(y) f_1
+ \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \chi_m(y) m_1+ \chi_{\Omega_0}  \chi_m(y) \beta C_1^0$ and $\epsilon \nabla d_\epsilon  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}} \chi_{\Omega_0}   \chi_m(y) \beta \nabla_y C_1^0$.
 For any $\underline{\Psi} \in (\mathcal{C}_o^\infty(\Omega;\mathcal{C}_{per}^\infty(Y)))^3$ we write
 $$
\int_{\Omega \times J} \epsilon \nabla d^\epsilon \cdot \underline{\Psi}
(x,\frac{x}{\epsilon}) \, dxdt
 = - \int_{\Omega \times J} d^\epsilon \Bigl( \epsilon \mathop{\rm div}_x
\underline{\Psi}(x,\frac{x}{\epsilon}) + \mathop{\rm div}_y
\underline{\Psi}(x,\frac{x}{\epsilon}) \Bigr) \, dxdt.
 $$
 We take the two-scale limits on both sides.
 We get
 \begin{align*}
& \int_{\Omega \times J}  \int_{Y_m} \chi_{\Omega_0} \beta \nabla_y C_1^0 \cdot \underline{\Psi} \, dxdydt
\\
& =- \int_{\Omega \times J}  \int_Y (\chi_f(y) f_1(x,t)
   + \chi_m(y) \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}(x) m_1(x,t)
   \\
&\quad   + \chi_m(y) \chi_{\Omega_0}(x) \beta(x) C_1^0(x,y,t)) \, \mathop{\rm div}_y \underline{\Psi}(x,y) \, dxdydt
 \\
&  =- \int_{\Omega \times J}  \int_{\partial Y_f} f_1(x,t) \underline{\Psi}(x,s)
  \cdot \nu_f \, dxdsdt
 - \int_{\Omega \times J}  \int_{\partial Y_m}  \bigl( \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}(x)  m_1(x,t)
 \\
&\quad  + \chi_{\Omega_0}(x) \beta(x) C_1^0(x,s,t) \bigr) \, \underline{\Psi}(x,s)
 \cdot \nu_m \, dxdsdt
 +  \int_{\Omega \times J}  \int_{Y_m} \chi_{\Omega_0} \beta \nabla_y C_1^0 \cdot \underline{\Psi} \, dxdydt.
 \end{align*}
 This proves that $f_1(x,t)=\chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}(x) m_1(x,t) + \chi_{\Omega_0}(x) \beta(x) C_1^0(x,s,t) $ for $s \in \partial Y_f \cap \partial Y_m = \Gamma_{fm}$ and thus
 $f_1(x,t)=m_1(x,t)$ a.e. in $(\Omega \setminus \Omega_0) \times J$ and $f_1(x,t)=\beta(x)C_1^0(x,s,t)$ a.e.  $(x,t) \in \Omega_0 \times J$, $s \in \Gamma_{fm}$.
 The same computations for $d^\epsilon_c=\chi_f^\epsilon \alpha + \chi_m^\epsilon \alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)$ show that $\alpha(x) (c_1+c_2)(x,t)=\alpha(x)$ a.e. in $\Omega \times J$.
 \end{proof}

We then claim and prove the following compactness result, of course
penalized by the degeneracy of function $\alpha$ in the set $\Omega_0$.

\begin{lemma} \label{lem5}
The sequences $(\chi_f^\epsilon \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}
f_1^\epsilon)$,
$(\chi_m^\epsilon \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} m_1^\epsilon)$ and
$(\chi_m^\epsilon \alpha^{1/2}(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon))$ are
sequentially compact in $L^2(\Omega \times J)$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
We begin by writing the problem satisfied by $m_1^\epsilon$ in
$\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J$.
\begin{gather}
\begin{aligned}
& \phi^\epsilon \partial_t m_1^\epsilon
+ \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla m_1^\epsilon
- \mathop{\rm div}( \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\mathcal{V}^\epsilon)
 \nabla m_1^\epsilon )
-(c_1^\epsilon-C_1^\epsilon) \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \alpha\\
&+  \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\mathcal{V}^\epsilon) \nabla c_1^\epsilon
 \cdot \nabla \alpha
-\mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\mathcal{V}^\epsilon) \nabla C_1^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \alpha
+  \mathop{\rm div}( (c_1^\epsilon-C_1^\epsilon)\mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\mathcal{V}^\epsilon) \nabla \alpha )
= q_s(\hat f_1-m_1^\epsilon),
\end{aligned}\label{2.7} \\
 \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\mathcal{V}^\epsilon) \nabla m_1^\epsilon  \cdot \nu_{fm} = (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \mathcal{D}(\underline{v}^\epsilon_f) \nabla f_1^\epsilon \cdot \nu_{fm}  + (c_1^\epsilon-C_1^\epsilon) \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\mathcal{V}^\epsilon) \nabla \alpha \cdot \nu_{fm} ,
\nonumber \\
 m_1^\epsilon = f_1^\epsilon \quad \mathrm{on}\  \Gamma_{fm} \times J,
\label{2.8} \\
 \mathcal{D}^\epsilon(\mathcal{V}^\epsilon) \nabla m_1^\epsilon \cdot \nu = 0 \quad \text{on }(\partial \Omega_m^\epsilon \cap \Gamma) \times J,
\label{2.9} \\
 m_1^\epsilon(x,0)=\alpha c_1^o(x) + \beta C_1^o(x)=\chi_m^\epsilon(x) f_1^o(x) \quad \text{in }\Omega^\epsilon_m.
\label{2.10}
\end{gather}

On the one hand, let $\psi \in L^4(J;H^2(\Omega))$.
We multiply \eqref{1.4} by $(\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon \psi$
and (\ref{2.7}) by
$\chi_m^\epsilon \psi$.
We integrate over $\Omega \times J$ and sum up the results.
We get
\begin{align*}
& \langle (\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon) (\chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon), \psi \rangle_{L^2(J;(H^2(\Omega))^\prime) \times L^2(J;H^2(\Omega))}
\\
&= \int_{\Omega \times J} (\chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \cdot \nabla f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla m_1^\epsilon) \, \psi \, dxdt
\\
&\quad + \int_{\Omega \times J} \chi_m^\epsilon (c_1^\epsilon-C_1^\epsilon) \, ( \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \alpha ) \,  \psi \, dxdt
+  \int_{\Omega \times J} \chi_m^\epsilon (c_1^\epsilon-C_1^\epsilon) \, \mathcal{D}^\epsilon  \nabla \alpha \cdot \nabla \psi \, dxdt
\\
&\quad
- \int_{\Omega \times J} (\chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \mathcal{D} \nabla f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \mathcal{D}^\epsilon  \nabla m_1^\epsilon) \cdot \nabla \psi \, dxdt
\\
&\quad
- \int_{\Omega \times J} 2 (2\alpha -1) \chi_f^\epsilon \mathcal{D} \nabla f_1^\epsilon  \cdot \nabla \alpha \, dxdt
\\
&\quad  -  \int_{\Omega \times J} \chi_m^\epsilon \bigl( \mathcal{D}^\epsilon  \nabla c_1^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \alpha - \mathcal{D}^\epsilon  \nabla C_1^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \alpha \bigr) \, \psi \, dxdt
\\
&\quad
+  \int_{\Omega \times J} q_s \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2+1) \hat f_1 -(\chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon)  \bigr) \, \psi \, dxdt.
\end{align*}
We recall that $\alpha \in \mathcal{C}^1(\overline \Omega)$.
Moreover, in view of the previous lemmas, we have
\begin{align*}
& \Bigl\vert \int_{\Omega \times J} (\chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \underline{v}_f^\epsilon \cdot \nabla f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla m_1^\epsilon) \, \psi \, dxdt \Bigr\vert
\\
&\le C \Vert \vert \underline{v}^\epsilon_f \vert^{1/2} \nabla f_1^\epsilon \Vert_{(L^2(\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J)^3}  \Vert \vert \underline{v}^\epsilon_f \vert^{1/2} \Vert_{L^4(\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J)}
\Vert \psi \Vert_{L^4(\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J)}
\\
& \quad
+ C \Vert \vert \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \vert^{1/2} \nabla m_1^\epsilon \Vert_{(L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J)^3}  \Vert \vert \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \vert^{1/2} \Vert_{L^4(\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J)}
\Vert \psi \Vert_{L^4(\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J)}
\\
&\le C \Vert \psi \Vert_{L^4(J;H^2(\Omega))},
\end{align*}
\begin{align*}
& \Bigl\vert \int_{\Omega \times J} (\chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \mathcal{D} \nabla f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \mathcal{D}^\epsilon  \nabla m_1^\epsilon) \cdot \nabla \psi \, dxdt
\Bigr\vert
\\
&\le C \Vert \nabla \psi \Vert_{(L^4(\Omega \times J))^3}\\
&\le C \Vert \psi \Vert_{L^4(J;H^2(\Omega))},
\end{align*}
\begin{align*}
& \Bigl\vert  \int_{\Omega \times J} q_s \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2+1) \hat f_1 -(\chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon)  \bigr) \, \psi \, dxdt \Bigr\vert
\\
& \le C(\Vert f_1^\epsilon \Vert_\infty, \Vert m_1^\epsilon\Vert_\infty)
\Vert q_s \Vert_{L^2(\Omega \times J)} \Vert \psi
\Vert_{L^2(\Omega \times J)}\\
&\le C  \Vert \psi \Vert_{L^4(J;H^2(\Omega))}.
\end{align*}
We infer from the latter computations that the sequence
$\partial_t (\phi_f^\epsilon(\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon
f_1^\epsilon+\phi^\epsilon\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon)$ is
uniformly bounded in $L^{4/3}(J;(H^2(\Omega))^\prime)$.
Since $(\phi_f^\epsilon(\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon
f_1^\epsilon+\phi^\epsilon\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon)$ is
uniformly bounded in $L^\infty(\Omega \times J)$, a standard
argument of Aubin's type  proves that
$(\phi_f^\epsilon(\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon
f_1^\epsilon+\phi^\epsilon\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon)$ lies in a
compact subset of  $\mathcal{C}(J;(H^1(\Omega))^\prime)$.
Therefore, there is $\xi \in L^2(J;(H^1(\Omega))^\prime)$, such that, up to an
extracted subsequence,
$$
\phi_f^\epsilon(\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon
+\phi^\epsilon\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon \to \xi \quad \text{in }
   \mathcal{C}(J;(H^1(\Omega))^\prime)   \text{ as }  \epsilon \to 0.
$$
Two-scale convergence arguments show that
\[
\xi=(\alpha^2+\beta^2) \bigl(\int_{Y_f}\phi_f (y) dy\bigr) f_1
+ \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \bigl(\int_{Y_m}\phi (y) dy\bigr) m_1
+ \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m}\phi (y)\beta C_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) dy  ,
\]
 where $m_1=\alpha c_1+\beta C_1=f_1$ a.e. in $\omega \setminus \Omega_0$
 by Lemma \ref{lem4}.

On the other hand, the sequence
$\alpha^{1/2}(\chi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon+\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon)$ is uniformly
 bounded in the space $L^2(J;H^1(\Omega))$.
We thus can pass to the limit in the product
$ \langle \phi_f^\epsilon(\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon
+\phi^\epsilon\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon, \alpha^{1/2}(\chi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon
+\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon )\rangle_{(H^1(\Omega))' \times H^1(\Omega)}$
 as follows.
\begin{align*}
& \lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \Bigl(
\bigl\langle \chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \phi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon,  \alpha^{1/2} \chi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon \bigr\rangle
+ \bigl\langle \chi_f^\epsilon (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \phi_f^\epsilon f_1^\epsilon
\\
&+ \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon, \alpha^{1/2}\chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon \bigr\rangle
\Bigr)\\
&=\bigl\langle \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \int_{Y_f}\phi_f (y) dy  + \int_{Y_m}\phi (y) dy \bigr) f_1, \alpha^{1/2} \vert Y_f\vert f_1 \bigr\rangle
\\
&\quad + \bigl\langle \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \int_{Y_f}\phi_f (y) dy  + \int_{Y_m}\phi (y) dy \bigr) f_1, \alpha^{1/2}\vert Y_m\vert m_1 \bigr\rangle
\\
&=\bigl\langle \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2) \int_{Y_f}\phi_f (y) dy  + \int_{Y_m}\phi (y) dy \bigr) f_1, \alpha^{1/2} f_1 \bigr\rangle .
\end{align*}
As a consequence we have
\begin{align*}
& \lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \bigl\langle \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon \bigr) (\chi_f^\epsilon  f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon -f_1 ),
\alpha^{1/2}(\chi_f^\epsilon  f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon -f_1) \bigr\rangle
\\
&= \lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \Bigl(
  \bigl\langle \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon \bigr) (\chi_f^\epsilon  f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon  ),
\alpha^{1/2}(\chi_f^\epsilon  f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon ) \bigr\rangle
\\
& \quad -2 \bigl\langle \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon \bigr) (\chi_f^\epsilon  f_1^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon  ),
\alpha^{1/2}f_1  \bigr\rangle
\\
& \quad + \bigl\langle \bigl( (\alpha^2+\beta^2)\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \phi^\epsilon \bigr) f_1, \alpha^{1/2}f_1  \bigr\rangle
\Bigr)
= 0 .
\end{align*}
Since $\alpha^2+\beta^2 >0$, $\phi_f^\epsilon,\phi^\epsilon \ge \phi_->0$,
this shows that $\alpha^{1/2}(\chi_f^\epsilon  f_1^\epsilon
+ \chi_m^\epsilon m_1^\epsilon )$ strongly converges to $\alpha^{1/2}f_1$
in $L^2(\Omega \times J)$.

The compactness result for $\alpha^{1/2}(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)$ is proved using  similar calculations.
Note in particular that the problem satisfied by  $c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon$ in $\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J$ is
\begin{gather}
\phi^\epsilon \partial_t(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)
+ \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)
- \mathop{\rm div}( \mathcal{D}^\epsilon \nabla (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon))
= q_s (1-c_1^\epsilon-c_2^\epsilon),
\label{2.11} \\
 \mathcal{D}^\epsilon \nabla (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) \cdot \nu = 0 \quad
   \text{on }\partial \Omega_m^\epsilon \times J,
\label{2.12} \\
(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)(x,0) = c_1^o(x)+c_2^o(x) \quad  \text{in }\Omega_m^\epsilon.
\label{2.13}
\end{gather}
This completes the proof.
 \end{proof}

We now aim to state some compactness result for the pressure.
But as emphasized in Lemma 1, we have no direct estimate for the pressure
gradient in the matrix part.
Our solely estimate is weighted by $(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)$.
We thus begin by the following result for the weight function.

\begin{lemma} \label{lem6}
For any real number $a$ such that $0<a<1$, the sequence
$\alpha^{1/2}(c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^{(a-1)/2} \nabla c^\epsilon$,
$c^\epsilon = c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon$, is uniformly bounded
in $(L^2(\Omega^\epsilon_m \times J))^3$.
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
The function $c^\epsilon$ is solution of Problem (\ref{2.11})-(\ref{2.13}).
We also already know that $c^\epsilon$ is uniformly bounded
in $L^\infty(\Omega^\epsilon_m \times J)$.
Let $0<a<1$.
We  multiply  (\ref{2.11}) by $(c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^a$ and we integrate
by parts over $\Omega^\epsilon_m \times (0,t)$, $t \in (0,T)$.
We obtain
\begin{align}
& \frac{1}{1+a}  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} (c^\epsilon(x,t)+\epsilon^2)^{1+a} \, dx
- \frac{1}{1+a}  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} (c_1^o(x)+c_2^o(x)+\epsilon^2)^{1+a} \, dx
\nonumber \\
& + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon\times (0,t) } ( \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla c^\epsilon) \, (c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^a\, dxdt
 + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon\times (0,t)}  \frac{a}{(c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^{1-a}}  \mathcal{D}^\epsilon \nabla c^\epsilon \cdot \nabla c^\epsilon \, dxdt
\nonumber \\
&
= \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon\times (0,t)} q_s (1- c^\epsilon)\, (c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^a\, dxdt.
\label{2.14}
\end{align}
We write
\begin{align*}
&\Bigl\vert  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon\times (0,t)} ( \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \cdot \nabla c^\epsilon) \, (c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^a\, dx dt
\\
&\le \Vert \vert \mathcal{V}^\epsilon\vert^{1/2} \nabla c^\epsilon \Vert_{(L^2(\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J))^3} \Vert \vert \mathcal{V}^\epsilon \vert^{1/2}\Vert_{L^4(\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J)} \Vert (c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^a \Vert_\infty
\le C,
\end{align*}
\begin{gather*}
\Bigl\vert \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon} (c^\epsilon(x,t)+\epsilon^2)^{1+a} \, dx \Bigr\vert
\le C \Vert (c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^{1+a} \Vert_\infty  \le C,
\\
\Bigl\vert \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon\times (0,t)} q_s (1- c^\epsilon)\, (c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^a\, dx dt \Bigr\vert
\le C \Vert q_s \Vert_{L^2(\Omega \times J} \Vert 1- c^\epsilon \Vert_\infty \Vert (c^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^a \Vert_\infty \le C.
\end{gather*}
The result of the lemma then follows from (\ref{2.14}).
\end{proof}

We now claim the following weighted compactness result for the pressure
in the matrix part of the domain.

\begin{lemma} \label{lem7}
The following strong convergence holds true.
$$
\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} \theta^\epsilon \to  \sqrt{\alpha(c_1+c_2)} p
\quad \text{in }L^2(\Omega \times J),
$$
where $p$ is the weak limit of $\theta^\epsilon$ in $L^2(\Omega \times J)$:
$$
p(x,t)= \int_{Y} p^0(x,y,t)\, dy.
$$
\end{lemma}


\begin{proof}
The following lines being quite  technical, we assume for sake of
simplicity that the global pressure $\theta^\epsilon$ is
nonnegative. In the general case, one would perform the same
computations as below replacing $\theta^\epsilon$ by the
nonnegative function $\sqrt{{\theta^\epsilon}^2+\eta}$, $\eta>0$.
We define the auxiliary function $P^\epsilon$ by
$$
P^\epsilon= \frac{\theta^\epsilon}{\theta^\epsilon+1}.
$$
We note that $(P^\epsilon)$ is a bounded sequence of
$L^\infty(\Omega \times J)$.
Let us denote by $P$ its weak limit.
We have introduced the function $P^\epsilon$ in view to apply the convexity
results for limits of bounded sequences in $L^\infty$ of \cite{Ta}.
We also note in view of Lemma \ref{lem1} and Proposition \ref{prop1} {\it (ii)}  that the two-scale limit of the sequence $(\alpha C^\epsilon \theta^\epsilon)$ does not depend on the microscopic variable $y$.
The same holds true for the sequence $( \alpha C^\epsilon P^\epsilon)$.
Furthermore, by Lemma \ref{lem5}, $(\alpha^{1/2}C^\epsilon)$ is sequentially
 compact in $L^2(\Omega \times J)$ and we have denoted by
$\alpha^{1/2}c=\alpha^{1/2}(c_1+c_2)$ its limit.
We then assert that
\begin{equation}
   \Phi^\epsilon \alpha  C^\epsilon P^\epsilon \rightharpoonup
\overline \Phi \, \alpha c P \  \text{in }\  L^2(\Omega \times J).
  \label{2.15}
  \end{equation}
Choosing $\psi/(p^\epsilon+1)^2$ as test function in the variational
formulation (\ref{2.1}), one easily checks that
$ \Phi^\epsilon \partial_t P^\epsilon$ is uniformly bounded in
$L^1(J;(W^{1,3}(\Omega))')$.
Using a classical argument of Aubin's type (see \cite{Si}), we conclude
that $\Phi^\epsilon  P^\epsilon$ is sequentially compact in
$L^2(J;(H^1(\Omega))')$.

We thus can pass to the limit $\epsilon \to 0$ in the duality product
$$
\langle \Phi^\epsilon P^\epsilon, \alpha C^\epsilon P^\epsilon/(P^\epsilon+1)
\rangle_{(H^1(\Omega))' \times H^1(\Omega)}
\to \langle \overline{\Phi^\epsilon P^\epsilon}, \alpha c \,
\overline{P^\epsilon/(P^\epsilon+1)} \rangle
$$
where $\overline{f^\epsilon}$ denotes the {\it ad hoc} limit of the sequence
$f^\epsilon$.
In view of (\ref{2.15}), the latter convergence reads
\begin{equation}
\alpha \Phi^\epsilon \frac{{P^\epsilon}^2}{P^\epsilon+1}
C^\epsilon \rightharpoonup \alpha \overline{\Phi} P
\overline{\frac{P^\epsilon}{P^\epsilon+1}} \, c \quad
\text{in }L^2(\Omega \times J). \label{2.16}
\end{equation}
Since $\Phi^\epsilon(P^\epsilon+1)$ is also sequentially compact in
$L^2(J;(H^1(\Omega))')$, we compute
$$
\langle \Phi^\epsilon (P^\epsilon+1), \alpha C^\epsilon P^\epsilon/
(P^\epsilon+1) \rangle_{(H^1(\Omega))' \times H^1(\Omega)}
\to \langle \overline{\Phi^\epsilon (P^\epsilon+1)}, \alpha c \, \overline{P^\epsilon/(P^\epsilon+1)} \rangle,$$
which means with (\ref{2.15})
$$
\alpha \Phi^\epsilon \frac{{P^\epsilon}(P^\epsilon+1)}{P^\epsilon+1}
 C^\epsilon \rightharpoonup  \alpha \overline{\Phi} c (P+1)
\overline{P^\epsilon/(P^\epsilon+1)}.
$$
But $ \Phi^\epsilon \frac{{P^\epsilon}(P^\epsilon+1)}{P^\epsilon+1}
\alpha^{1/2}C^\epsilon=\Phi^\epsilon P^\epsilon \alpha^{1/2} C^\epsilon
 \rightharpoonup \overline \Phi  P \alpha^{1/2} c$.
We thus infer from the latter relation that
\begin{equation}
\alpha c \, \overline{\frac{P^\epsilon}{P^\epsilon+1}} = \alpha c \, \frac{P}{P+1}.
\label{2.17}
\end{equation}
Inserting (\ref{2.17}) in (\ref{2.16}) yields
\begin{equation}
\alpha \Phi^\epsilon \frac{{P^\epsilon}^2}{P^\epsilon+1}
C^\epsilon \rightharpoonup \alpha \overline{\Phi} \frac{P^2}{P+1}
\, c \quad \text{in }L^2(\Omega \times J). \label{2.18}
\end{equation}
Now we note that  $(\alpha C^\epsilon/\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1})$ is
uniformly bounded in $L^2(J;H^1(\Omega))$.
We then pass to the limit in the following duality product
$$
\langle \Phi^\epsilon P^\epsilon,\alpha C^\epsilon /\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}
\rangle_{(H^1(\Omega))' \times H^1(\Omega)}
\to \langle \overline{\Phi^\epsilon P^\epsilon}, \alpha c \,
\overline{1/\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}} \rangle,
$$
that is with (\ref{2.15})
\begin{equation}
\alpha \Phi^\epsilon P^\epsilon \frac{C^\epsilon} {\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}
 \rightharpoonup \alpha \overline{\Phi} P c
\overline{\frac{1} {\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}}.
\label{2.19}
\end{equation}
Using the strong convergence of $\alpha^{1/2}C^\epsilon$ to $\alpha^{1/2}c$ in $L^2(\Omega\times J)$, we also have
\begin{equation}
\alpha \Phi^\epsilon P^\epsilon \frac{C^\epsilon} {\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}
 \rightharpoonup \alpha \overline{\Phi}  c \overline{\frac{P^\epsilon}
{\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}}.
\label{2.20}
\end{equation}
Since we manipulate here bounded sequences in $L^\infty(\Omega \times J)$,
we can use convexity arguments of Tartar \cite{Ta} to claim that
\begin{gather*}
 { \frac{1}{\sqrt{P+1}} \le \overline{\frac{1}
{\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}} } \text{because   of the concavity  of }
   x \mapsto \frac{1}{\sqrt{x+1}} \text{ in }\mathbb{R}_+,
\\
  {  \overline{\frac{P^\epsilon}
{\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}} \le \frac{P} {\sqrt{P+1}} }
\text{because   of  the   convexity  of }   x \mapsto
\frac{x}{\sqrt{x+1}}\  \text{in }\mathbb{R}_+ .
\end{gather*}
The two latter relations with (\ref{2.19}) and (\ref{2.20}) give
\begin{equation}
\alpha \Phi^\epsilon C^\epsilon \frac{P^\epsilon}
{\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}  \rightharpoonup \alpha \overline{\Phi}  c
\frac{P} {\sqrt{P+1}} \quad \text{in }L^2(\Omega \times J).
\label{2.21}
\end{equation}

Bearing in mind that $\Phi^\epsilon \ge \phi_- >0$, we infer from
(\ref{2.18}) and (\ref{2.21}) that
$$
\alpha C^\epsilon  \frac{P^\epsilon} {\sqrt{P^\epsilon+1}}
\to \alpha c  \frac{P} {\sqrt{P+1}}
$$
a.e. in $\Omega \times J$ and strongly in $L^p(\Omega \times J)$,
for all $1 \le p < \infty$.
It follows that $(\alpha{P^\epsilon}^2/(P^\epsilon+1))
C^\epsilon(P^\epsilon+1) \rightharpoonup \alpha P^2 c$,
and then
$$
\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} P^\epsilon  \to    \sqrt{ \alpha c} P
 \text{ a.e.   in $\Omega \times J$  and   strongly   in  }
L^p(\Omega \times J),\   \forall 1 \le p < \infty .
$$
We note that all the latter computations can be performed using the function
$$
{P^\epsilon}' = \frac{{\theta^\epsilon}^2}{\theta^\epsilon+1}
$$
instead of $P^\epsilon$. It leads to
$$
\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} {P^\epsilon}'  \to    \sqrt{\alpha c} P'
\text{ a.e.   in  $\Omega \times J$  and   strongly   in }
L^p(\Omega \times J),\   \forall 1 \le p < \infty .
$$
Let us go back to the problem of the limit behavior of the global
pressure $\theta^\epsilon$.
The two latter convergence results read
\begin{equation}
 \sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} \frac{\theta^\epsilon}{\theta^\epsilon+1} \to    \sqrt{\alpha c} \overline{\frac{\theta^\epsilon}{\theta^\epsilon+1}}, \quad
 \sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} \frac{{\theta^\epsilon}^2}{\theta^\epsilon+1} \to    \sqrt{\alpha c} \overline{\frac{{\theta^\epsilon}^2}{\theta^\epsilon+1}}.
 \label{2.22}
 \end{equation}
Similar computations than those performed with $P^\epsilon$ in the latter lines allow to assert that
$$
\sqrt{\alpha c}  \overline{\frac{\theta^\epsilon}{\theta^\epsilon+1}}
=  \sqrt{\alpha c} \frac{p}{p+1},
$$
where $p$ is the weak limit in $L^2(\Omega \times J)$ of $\theta^\epsilon$.
It then follows from the first convergence in (\ref{2.22}) that
$\alpha C^\epsilon {\theta^\epsilon}^2/(\theta^\epsilon+1)^2 \to
\alpha c p^2/(p+1)^2$ a.e. in $\Omega \times J$.
Multiplying the latter relation by $\theta^\epsilon+1$, we conclude that
$$
\alpha C^\epsilon \frac{{\theta^\epsilon}^2}{\theta^\epsilon+1}
\rightharpoonup \alpha c \frac{p^2}{p+1}.
$$
This convergence together with the second one in (\ref{2.22}) proves that
$$
\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} \frac{{\theta^\epsilon}^2}{\theta^\epsilon+1}
 \to \sqrt{\alpha c} \frac{p^2}{p+1}  \text{ a.e.  in }\Omega \times J.
$$
Since $\alpha^{1/2}C^\epsilon \to \alpha^{1/2}c$ and thus
$\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} (\theta^\epsilon+1) \rightharpoonup
 \sqrt{\alpha c} (p+1)$, it follows that
$$
\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} \frac{{\theta^\epsilon}^2}{\theta^\epsilon+1}
\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} (\theta^\epsilon+1)
= \alpha C^\epsilon {\theta^\epsilon}^2  \rightharpoonup \alpha c p^2.
$$
We conclude that
$$
\sqrt{\alpha C^\epsilon} \theta^\epsilon \to \sqrt{\alpha c} p
 \text{ strongly  in } L^2(\Omega \times J).
$$
Lemma \ref{lem7} is proved.
\end{proof}

Our last preliminary  lemma before to pass to the limit in the pressure
problem gives the two-scale limit of the weighted pressure.

\begin{lemma} \label{lem8}
There exists some function
$\xi_2 \in L^{2q/(q+2)}(\Omega \times J;H^1_{per}(Y))$ such that
$$
\alpha C^\epsilon \nabla \theta^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\
  \alpha (c_1+c_2) \nabla p +\nabla_y \xi_2.$$
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
Let $\underline \Psi  \in (\mathcal{D}(\Omega \times J;
\mathcal{C}_{per}^\infty(Y)))^3$ such that $\mathop{\rm div}_y
\underline \Psi =0$.
We set  $\underline \Psi^\epsilon(x,t)= \underline \Psi(x,x/\epsilon,t)$.
The sequence $((\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2) \nabla \theta^\epsilon)$
being uniformly bounded in $(L^2(\Omega \times J))^3$, it admits a
two-scale limit.
Let us denote it by $\underline \xi$.
Since $ \epsilon \nabla \theta^\epsilon$ is uniformly bounded in
$(L^2(\Omega \times J))^3$, we also have
$$
\alpha C^\epsilon \nabla \theta^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\
  \underline \xi.
$$
By definition of $\xi$ we have
\begin{equation}
\lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \int_{\Omega \times J} (\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2) \nabla \theta^\epsilon \cdot \underline \Psi^\epsilon \, dxdt
= \int_{\Omega \times J} \int_{Y} \underline \xi \cdot \underline \Psi \, dxdt.
\label{2.23}
\end{equation}
We also have
\begin{align*}
&\int_{\Omega \times J} (\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2) \nabla \theta^\epsilon \cdot \underline \Psi^\epsilon \, dxdt
\\
&
= \int_{\Omega \times J} (\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^{1/2} (\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^{1/2}  \nabla \theta^\epsilon \cdot \underline \Psi^\epsilon \, dxdt
\\
&
= -2 \int_{\Omega \times J}(\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^{1/2} \theta^\epsilon \nabla\bigl((\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)^{1/2} \bigr)  \cdot \underline \Psi^\epsilon \, dxdt
\\
&\quad
- \int_{\Omega \times J} (\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2) \theta^\epsilon \, \mathop{\rm div}_x \underline \Psi^\epsilon \, dxdt
\end{align*}
and then
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
& \lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \int_{\Omega \times J} (\alpha C^\epsilon+\epsilon^2)
\nabla \theta^\epsilon \cdot \underline \Psi^\epsilon \, dxdt \\
&= -2 \int_{\Omega \times J} \int_{Y} \alpha(x)^{1/2} (c_1+c_2)^{1/2} p(x,t)\\
 &\quad\times  \nabla\bigl(\alpha^{1/2} (c_1+c_2)^{1/2}  + \nabla_y C_{sqrt} \bigr)
 \underline \Psi(x,y,t) \, dxdydt\\
&\quad - \int_{\Omega \times J} \int_{Y} \alpha (c_1+c_2) \, p(x,t) \,
 \mathop{\rm div}_x \underline \Psi(x,y,t) \, dxdydt,
\end{aligned}\label{2.24}
\end{equation}
where $C_{sqrt} \in L^2(\Omega \times J;H^1_{per}(Y))$ is such that
$$
\nabla (\alpha C^\epsilon)^{1/2} \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\
  \nabla\bigl( \alpha(c_1+c_2)\bigr)^{1/2} + \nabla_y C_{sqrt}.
$$
It follows from (\ref{2.23})-(\ref{2.24}) that
\begin{align*}
 \underline \xi(x,y,t)
&= -p(x,t)\, \nabla\bigl( \alpha(x) (c_1(x,t)+c_2(x,t)) \bigr)
\\
& \quad
-2 \alpha(x)^{1/2}(c_1(x,t)+c_2(x,t))^{1/2} p(x,t) \, \nabla_y C_{sqrt}(x,y,t)
\\
& \quad
+ \nabla \bigl( \alpha(x)(c_1(x,t)+c_2(x,t))p(x,t) \bigr)
+ \nabla_y \xi_1(x,y,t)
\end{align*}
for some function $\xi_1 \in L^2(\Omega \times J; H^1_{per}(Y))$.
Defining the function
$\xi_2 \in L^{2q/(q+2)}(\Omega \times J; H^1_{per}(Y))$
by $\xi_2(x,y,t)=-2 \alpha(x)^{1/2}(c_1(x,t)+c_2(x,t))^{1/2}
 p(x,t)C_{sqrt}(x,y,t)+\xi_1$, we have
$$
\underline \xi =\alpha (c_1+c_2)\nabla p + \nabla_y \xi_2.
$$
This completes the proof.
\end{proof}

We now have the main tools to pass to the limit $\epsilon \to 0$ in
the microscopic problem.

\section{Derivation of the homogenized problem}

We begin by studying the limit behavior of  the pressure problem.
 We multiply  Equation (\ref{1.5}) by a test function in
 the form
$\Psi(x,t)+\epsilon  \Psi_{1,f} (x,x  /   \epsilon,t ) $, with
$\Psi \in \mathcal{D} (\Omega \times J  )$  and $\Psi_{1,f} \in
\mathcal{D} (\Omega \times J;C_{per}^{\infty} (Y ) )$. We also
multiply Equation (\ref{1.9}) by $\Psi(x,t)+\epsilon  \Psi_{1,m}
(x,x  /   \epsilon,t ) + \psi(x,x/\epsilon,t) $, where
$\Psi_{1,m} \in \mathcal{D} (\Omega \times J;C_{per}^{\infty} (Y )
)$ is such that $\Psi_{1,m}(x,y,t)=\Psi_{1,f}(x,y,t)$ if $y \in
\Gamma_{fm}$ and $\psi \in \mathcal{D}(\Omega \times
J;\mathcal{C}^\infty_{per}(Y)$ with support in $\Omega_0 \times
Y_m \times J$. Integrating over $\Omega \times J$, we obtain
\begin{align*}
& \int_{\Omega \times J}\chi_f^\epsilon \phi_f^{\epsilon} (x)\, \partial_t p_f^{\epsilon}
\bigl(\Psi  (x,t )+\epsilon \,  \Psi_{1,f}(x,x/\epsilon ,t ) \bigr)
\\
&
+ \int_{\Omega \times J}\chi_m^\epsilon  \phi^{\epsilon} (x)\, \partial_t p^{\epsilon}
\bigl(\Psi  (x,t )+\epsilon \,  \Psi_{1,m}(x,x/\epsilon ,t ) + \psi(x,x/\epsilon ,t )  \bigr)
\\
&
+\int_{\Omega \times J}\chi_f^\epsilon \frac{k_f^{\epsilon}(x)}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)}  \nabla  p_f^{\epsilon}
\cdot
\bigl(\nabla \Psi +\epsilon   \nabla_x \Psi_{1,f}^\epsilon
+\nabla_y \Psi_{1,f}^\epsilon  \bigr)
\\
&
+\int_{\Omega \times J}\chi_m^\epsilon \frac{k^{\epsilon}(x)}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)} \bigl( \alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) (1-\epsilon^2)+\epsilon^2 \bigr)  \nabla  p^{\epsilon}
\cdot
\bigl(\nabla \Psi +\epsilon   \nabla_x \Psi_{1,m}^\epsilon
+\nabla_y \Psi_{1,m}^\epsilon
\\
&
+ \nabla_x \psi^\epsilon + \frac{1}{\epsilon} \nabla_y \psi^\epsilon
\bigr)\\
&=\int_{\Omega \times J} q_s \, (\Psi+ \epsilon \Psi_{1,f}^\epsilon
+ \epsilon \Psi_{1,m}^\epsilon  + \psi ).
\end{align*}
Letting $\epsilon \to 0$, we get
\begin{equation}
\begin{aligned}
& \int_{\Omega \times J}\int_{Y_f} \phi_f(y)\,    \partial_t p_f \,
\Psi(x,t )
+\int_{\Omega  \times J} \int_{Y_m} \phi(y)\, \partial_t p^0  \,
(\Psi(x,t) + \psi(x,y,t) )
 \\
&  +\int_{\Omega \times J}\int_{Y_f} \frac{k_f(y)}{\mu(f_1)}  ( \nabla p_f + \nabla_y p_f^1 )\cdot  ( \nabla \Psi + \nabla_y \Psi_{1,f})
 \\
&  +\int_{\Omega \times J}\int_{Y_m}  \frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)}  ( \alpha(c_1+c_2)\nabla p + \nabla_y \xi_2 )\cdot  ( \nabla \Psi + \nabla_y \Psi_{1,m})
 \\
&
+ \int_{\Omega_0 \times J} \int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot
\nabla_y \psi \\
&=\int_{\Omega \times J \times Y}q_s\,  (\Psi + \psi).
\end{aligned}\label{3.1}
\end{equation}
By density arguments we conclude that the corresponding  two-scale homogenized system in
$\Omega \times J$ is:
\begin{align*}
&\bigl( \overline{\phi_f}^{Y_f} + \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \bigr)   \partial_tp_f
+  \chi_{\Omega_0}  \int_{Y_m}    \phi(y) \partial_tp^0 \, dy
\\
& -\mathop{\rm div} \Bigl( \frac{1}{\mu(f_1)} \int_{Y_f} k_f(y)(\nabla p_f
+\nabla_y p_f^1 )dy\Bigr)
\\
& -\mathop{\rm div} \Bigl( \frac{1}{\mu(f_1)} \int_{Y_m} k(y)(\alpha\nabla p_f
+\nabla_y \xi_2 )dy\Bigr)
=q_s ,
\end{align*}
\begin{gather*}
-\mathop{\rm div}_y \Bigl( \frac{k_f(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y p_f^1) \Bigr)
=0 \quad \text{in }   Y_f  ,
\\
 -\mathop{\rm div}_y \Bigl( \frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\alpha \nabla p_f +\nabla_y \xi_2) \Bigr)
=0 \quad \text{in }   Y_m  ,
\\
 k_f(y) (\nabla  p_f +\nabla_y p_f^1)\cdot  \nu_y =0 \quad
\text{on }  \Gamma_{fm}  , \quad
 k_f(y) (\nabla p_f + \nabla_y p_f^1)
\cdot \nu = 0 \quad \text{on }  \Gamma ,
\\
 k(y) (\alpha \nabla p_f +\nabla_y \xi_2)\cdot  \nu_y =0 \quad
\text{on }  \Gamma_{fm}  , \quad
k(y) (\alpha \nabla p_f +\nabla_y \xi_2)
\cdot \nu = 0 \quad \text{on }  \Gamma ,
\\
\phi(y) \partial_t p^0 + \mathop{\rm div}_y
(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^0)=q_s, \
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^0=-\frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \quad
\text{in }\Omega_0 \times Y_m \times J,
\\
 p_f(x,0)= p^0(x,y,0) = p^o(x) \quad  \text{in }  \Omega
\times Y_m,
\\
 p_f(x,t)=p^0(x,y,t) \  \mathrm{if} \  y \in \Gamma_{fm},\quad
\alpha p_f = \alpha p  \  \text{in }\Omega \times J.
\end{gather*}
Let us add some justifications of the latter relation.
We have already proved in Lemma \ref{lem3} that $p^0(x,y,t)=p_f(x,t)$ if $y \in \Gamma_{fm}$.
We thus assert  that $(c_1+c_2)(x,t) p^0(x,y,t)=(c_1+c_2)(x,t)  p_f(x,t)$ if $y \in \Gamma_{fm}$.
We also recall that $\alpha(c_1+c_2)=\alpha$ a.e. in $\Omega \times J$.
Because of Lemma \ref{lem5},
$$
\alpha C^\epsilon \theta^\epsilon  \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\
 \alpha(c_1+c_2) p^0 = \alpha p^0,
$$
and because of Lemma \ref{lem7},
$$
\alpha C^\epsilon \theta^\epsilon  \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\
\alpha (c_1+c_2) p= \alpha p.
$$
It follows that $\alpha(x) p^0(x,y,t)=\alpha(x) p(x,t)=\alpha(x)  p_f(x,t)$
if $y \in \Gamma_{fm}$, that is $p_f=p$ a.e. in
$(\Omega \setminus \Omega_0) \times J$.

Now we  eliminate the function $p_f^1$ in the former system.
We use  the solution $(v^i)_{1 \le i \le 3}$ of the cell problem
(\ref{3.2}) below.
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
 -\mathop{\rm div}{}_y \bigl(  (\chi_f(y)k_f(y) + \chi_m(y) k(y) )
(\nabla_y v^i(y)+e^i ) \bigr)=0 \quad \text{in }  Y,\\
 \int_Y v^i(y)\, dy =0 , \quad y \mapsto v^i(y)\;
Y\text{-periodic},
\end{gathered}
\label{3.2}
\end{equation}
where $e^j$ is the unit vector in the $j$-th direction.
We define  the homogenized permeability tensor  $\overline{K}^H_\alpha$  by
\begin{gather}
{\overline{K}^H_\alpha}_{ij}
=\int_{Y} \bigl( \chi_f(y) k_f(y) + \chi_m(y) \alpha k(y) \bigr)
(\nabla_y  v^i(y)+e^i ) \cdot (\nabla_y v^j(y)+e^j )dy ,
\label{3.3}
\end{gather}
$1\le i,j \le 3$.
Through the relations
$ p_f^1(x,y,t)= \chi_f(y) \sum_{i=1}^3  \partial_{x_i}p_f(x,t)\,  v^i(y)$ and
$ \xi_2(x,y,t)= \chi_m(y)\alpha(x)\,  \sum_{i=1}^3
\partial_{x_i}p_f(x,t)\,  v^i(y)$
we recover the following homogenized system.

\begin{proposition} \label{prop2}
 The homogenized pressure problem is
\begin{gather}
\bigl( \overline{\phi_f}^{Y_f} + \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \bigr) \,    \partial_tp_f - \mathop{\rm div}
\Bigl(\frac{\overline{K}^H_\alpha}{\mu(f_1)}  \nabla p_f \Bigr)
= q_s - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m}\phi \,  \partial_t p^0 \, dy
\quad \text{in }\Omega \times J,
\label{3.4} \\
\phi(y) \partial_t p^0 + \mathop{\rm div}_y
(\underline{\mathcal{V}}^0)=q_s, \
\underline{\mathcal{V}}^0=-\frac{k(y)}{\mu} \quad \text{in }\Omega_0 \times Y_m \times J,
\label{3.5} \\
 p_f(x,t)=p^0(x,y,t) \  \mathrm{if} \  y \in \Gamma_{fm},\  (x,t) \in  \Omega \times J,
\label{3.6}\\
  \overline{K}_\alpha^H  \nabla p_f  \cdot \nu
= 0 \ \text{on}\ \partial \Omega \times J, \  p_f(x,0)= p^0(x,y,0)
= p^o(x) \  \text{in }\Omega \times Y_m , \label{3.7}
\end{gather}
where the homogenized porosity is defined by
$$ \overline{\phi_f}^{Y_f} = \int_{Y_f} \phi_f(y)  dy , \   \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} = \int_{Y_m} \phi(y)  dy$$
and  the   homogenized permeability tensor $\overline{K}^H_\alpha$ is  defined
in \eqref{3.3}.
\end{proposition}

In $\Omega_0$, the matrix plays the role of a source and produces the additional right-hand side source-like term which is characteristic of a double porosity model (see \cite{Bar}).
In $\Omega \setminus \Omega_0$, the model is of single porosity type.
But the interconnection function $\alpha$ influences the homogenized
permeability $\overline K^H_\alpha$.


We now have to state some strong convergence for the Darcy velocities
in order to pass to the limit in the non linear terms of the concentrations equations.
We claim and prove the following  result.

\begin{lemma} \label{lem9}
 We have the following strong two-scale convergences.
\begin{gather*}
 \chi^\epsilon_f \frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon) } \nabla p_f^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\to}}\  \chi_f(y) \frac{k_f(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\nabla p_f + \nabla_y p_f^1),
\\
 \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \chi^\epsilon_m \alpha (c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) \frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon) } \nabla p^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\to}}\  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \chi_m(y) \frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\alpha \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2),
\\
 \chi_{ \Omega_0} \chi^\epsilon_m \frac{\epsilon k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon) } \nabla p^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\to}}\  \chi_{ \Omega_0}  \chi_m(y) \frac{k(y)}{\mu}  \nabla_y p^0.
\end{gather*}
\end{lemma}

\begin{proof}
We first prove the  following convergence result.
\begin{align}
&\lim_{\epsilon \to 0}\int_{\Omega \times J} \frac{K_\alpha^{\epsilon}}
{\mu(\xi^\epsilon)} \nabla  \theta^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \theta^\epsilon \,
  dx dt
  \nonumber \\
&=\int_{\Omega \times J}\int_{Y_f} \frac{k_f(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y p_f^1) \cdot (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y p_f^1) \,  dx dy dt
  \nonumber  \\
& \quad
+ \int_{(\Omega \setminus \Omega_0) \times J}\int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\alpha \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2 ) \cdot (\alpha \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2 ) \, dxdydt
   \nonumber \\
& \quad
+ \int_{\Omega_0 \times J}\int_{Y_m}\frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y p^0\, dx dy dt,
\label{3.8}
\end{align}
where $\xi^\epsilon=\chi^\epsilon_f f_1^\epsilon+\chi^\epsilon_m m_1^\epsilon$ and $K_\alpha^\epsilon=\chi_f^\epsilon k_f^\epsilon + \chi_m^\epsilon \bigl( \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon) (1-\epsilon^2) + \epsilon^2\bigr) k^\epsilon$.
Setting  $\Omega_t =\Omega  \times (0,t)$, we consider  the following energy equation for $t \in J$.
\[
\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega \Phi^\epsilon ( \theta^\epsilon(x,t)^2 -   p^o(x)^2 ) dx
+ \int_{\Omega_t} \frac{K_\alpha^\epsilon}{\mu(\xi^\epsilon)}
 \nabla \theta^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \theta^\epsilon   \,dx ds
=\int_{\Omega_t} q_s\,  \theta^\epsilon   \,dx ds .
\]
In view of the two-scale convergence of $\theta^\epsilon$ we have
\begin{align*}
& \lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \int_{\Omega_t} q_s\,  \theta^\epsilon \,  \,dx\,ds\\
&= \int_{\Omega_t}\int_Y q_s \bigl( \chi_f(y) p_f(x,t) +\chi_m(y)  (\chi_{\Omega_0} p^0(x,y,t)
+ \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} p_f(x,t)  \bigr) \, dx dy ds\\
&= \int_{\Omega_t} q_s  \bigl(  \vert Y_f \vert p_f + \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \vert Y_m \vert p_f
+ \chi_{\Omega_0} \Bigl( \int_{Y_m} p^0 dy \Bigr) \bigr) \, dxds\\
&=  \int_{\Omega_t} q_s  \bigl( p_f + \chi_{\Omega_0}
 \Bigl( \int_{Y_m} (p^0-p_f) dy \Bigr) \bigr) \, dxds.
\end{align*}
Then we write the variational formulation (\ref{3.1}) with $\Psi=p_f$,
$\psi=\chi_{\Omega_0} (p^0-p_f)$, $\Psi_{1,f}=p_f^1$ and $\Psi_{1,m}=\xi_2$.
Bearing in mind that $p_f=p^0$ a.e. in $(\Omega \setminus \Omega_0) \times J$,
we assert that
\begin{align*}
&\lim_{\epsilon \to 0} \Bigl(
\frac{1}{2}\int_\Omega \Phi^\epsilon   {\theta^\epsilon(x,t)}^2\,  dx
 + \int_{\Omega_t} \frac{K_\alpha^\epsilon}{\mu(\xi^\epsilon)}
\nabla \theta^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \theta^\epsilon  \,  \,dx ds
 \Bigr) \\
&=\frac{1}{2} \Bigl( \int_\Omega \!  \int_{Y_f} \phi_f p_f^2(x,t)\, dx dy
+ \int_{\Omega }\!  \int_{Y_m} \phi \bigl( \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} p_f^2(x,t) + \chi_{\Omega_0}
{p^0}(x,y,t)^2 \bigr) \, dx dy
\Bigr)
\\
&\quad +\int_{\Omega_t}\int_{Y_f} \frac{k_f(y)}{\mu(f_1)}  (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y p_f^1)  \cdot  (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y f_f^1) \,  dx dy  ds
\\
&\quad +\int_{(\Omega \setminus \Omega_0) \times (0,t)}\int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)}  (\alpha \nabla p_f +\nabla_y \xi_2)  \cdot  (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y \xi_2)  \, dxdyds
\\
&\quad + \int_{\Omega_0 \times (0,t)}\int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu}\  \nabla_y p^0
\cdot \nabla_y p^0 \,  dx dy ds.
\end{align*}
The limit of each term in the left-hand side of the last relation is larger than the
corresponding two-scale limit in the right-hand side. Thus
equality holds for each contribution and (\ref{3.8}) is
proved.
Now we recall the two-scale convergences
\begin{gather*}
\chi^\epsilon_f (K_\alpha^\epsilon/\mu(\xi^\epsilon) ) \nabla \theta^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \chi_f(y) (k_f(y)/\mu(f_1)) (\nabla p_f + \nabla_y p_f^1),
\\
\chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \chi^\epsilon_m  (K_\alpha^\epsilon/\mu(\xi^\epsilon) ) \nabla \theta^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \chi_m(y) (k(y)/\mu(f_1)) (\alpha \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2)
\\
 \chi_{ \Omega_0} \chi^\epsilon_m  (K_\alpha^\epsilon/\mu(\xi^\epsilon) ) \nabla \theta^\epsilon \  {\stackrel{2}{\rightharpoonup}}\  \chi_{\Omega_0}  \chi_m(y) (k(y)/\mu)  \nabla_y p^0.
\end{gather*}
It thus follows from (\ref{3.8}) that
\begin{gather*}
\begin{aligned}
&\lim_{\epsilon \to 0}\int_{\Omega \times J} \chi^\epsilon_f  \frac{K_\alpha^{\epsilon}}
{\mu(\xi^\epsilon)} \nabla  \theta^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \theta^\epsilon \,  dx dt
\\
&=\int_{\Omega \times J}\int_{Y_f} \frac{k_f(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y p_f^1) \cdot (\nabla p_f +\nabla_y p_f^1) \,  dx dy dt ,
\end{aligned}\\
\begin{aligned}
& \lim_{\epsilon \to 0}\int_{\Omega \times J} \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \chi^\epsilon_m   \frac{K_\alpha^{\epsilon}} {\mu(\xi^\epsilon)} \nabla  \theta^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \theta^\epsilon \,  dx dt
\\
&= \int_{(\Omega \setminus \Omega_0) \times J}\int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\alpha^{1/2} \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2 ) \cdot (\alpha^{1/2}  \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2 ) \, dxdydt,
\end{aligned} \\
  \lim_{\epsilon \to 0}\int_{\Omega \times J} \chi_{\Omega_0} \chi^\epsilon_m   \frac{K_\alpha^{\epsilon}} {\mu(\xi^\epsilon)} \nabla  \theta^\epsilon \cdot \nabla \theta^\epsilon \,  dx dt
= \int_{\Omega_0 \times J}\int_{Y_m}\frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y p^0\, dx dy dt.
\end{gather*}
Bearing in mind  that $K^\epsilon$ is a symmetric definite positive
tensor and that it is considered as an admissible test function
for the two-scale convergence, the latter relations are  sufficient
to assert the  result of the lemma.
\end{proof}

Let us now turn to the concentration problem.
Let $(\psi_f,\psi_1,\Psi_1) \in (\mathcal{D}(\Omega \times J))^3$,
$(\psi_f^1,\psi_1^1,\Psi_1^1) \in (\mathcal{D}(\Omega \times J;
\mathcal{C}^\infty_{per}(Y)))^3$,
$(\psi,\Psi) \in (\mathcal{D}(\Omega \times J;\mathcal{C}^\infty_{per}(Y)))^2$
with supports in $\Omega_0 \times Y_m \times J$, such that
\begin{gather*}
 \psi_f(x,t) =  \alpha(x)  \psi_1(x,t) + \beta(x) \Psi_1(x,t)
\quad \text{in }\Omega \times J,
\\
\epsilon \psi_f^{1} (x,y,t) = \alpha(x) \bigl(  \epsilon \psi_1^{1} (x,y,t) + \psi(x,y,t) \bigr)
 + \beta(x) \bigl(  \epsilon \Psi_1^{1} (x,y,t) + \Psi(x,y,t) \bigr)\\
 \text{if } (x,t) \in \Omega \times J, \  y \in \Gamma_{fm}.
 \end{gather*}
We write the variational formulation (\ref{2.2}) with
$d_f=\psi_f + \epsilon \psi_f^{1,\epsilon}$,
$d_1=\psi_1+\epsilon \psi_1^{1,\epsilon}+ \psi^\epsilon$ and
$D_1=\Psi_1+\epsilon \Psi_1^{1,\epsilon}+\Psi^\epsilon $.
We obtain
\begin{align*}
& \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} \phi_f^\epsilon \partial_t f_1^\epsilon \, (\psi_f + \epsilon \psi_f^{1,\epsilon} )
+  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \phi^\epsilon \partial_t c_1^\epsilon \, (\psi_1 + \epsilon \psi_1^{1,\epsilon} + \psi^\epsilon )
\\
& +  \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \phi^\epsilon \partial_t C_1^\epsilon \, (\Psi_1 + \epsilon \Psi_1^{1,\epsilon} + \Psi^\epsilon )
+ \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J}  \Bigl( - \frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)} \nabla p_f^\epsilon \Bigr) \cdot \nabla f_1^\epsilon \, (\psi_f + \epsilon \psi_f^{1,\epsilon} )
\\
& + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}  \Bigl( - \frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)} \bigl( \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)(1-\epsilon^2)+\epsilon^2 \bigr) \nabla p^\epsilon \Bigr) \cdot \nabla c_1^\epsilon \, (\psi_1 + \epsilon \psi_1^{1,\epsilon} + \psi^\epsilon)
\\
& + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}  \Bigl( - \frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)} \bigl( \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)(1-\epsilon^2)+\epsilon^2 \bigr) \nabla p^\epsilon \Bigr) \cdot \nabla C_1^\epsilon \, (\Psi_1 + \epsilon \Psi_1^{1,\epsilon} + \Psi^\epsilon)
\\
& + \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}\Bigl(\frac{k_f^\epsilon}{\mu(f_1^\epsilon)} \nabla p_f^\epsilon \Bigr) \nabla f_1^\epsilon \cdot \bigl( \nabla \psi_f + \epsilon \nabla_x \psi_f^{1,\epsilon} + \nabla_y \psi_f^{1,\epsilon}  \bigr)
\\
&  + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}^\epsilon\Bigl(\frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)} \bigl( \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)(1-\epsilon^2)+\epsilon^2 \bigr) \nabla p^\epsilon \Bigr) \nabla c_1^\epsilon \cdot \bigl( \nabla \psi_1 + \epsilon \nabla_x \psi_1^{1,\epsilon}
\\
& + \nabla_y \psi_1^{1,\epsilon} + \nabla_x \psi^\epsilon + \frac{1}{\epsilon} \nabla_y \psi^\epsilon \bigr)
+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J} \mathcal{D}^\epsilon\Bigl(\frac{k^\epsilon}{\mu(m_1^\epsilon)} \bigl( \alpha(c_1^\epsilon+c_2^\epsilon)(1-\epsilon^2)+\epsilon^2 \bigr)
\\
& \nabla p^\epsilon \Bigr) \nabla C_1^\epsilon \cdot \bigl( \nabla \Psi_1 + \epsilon \nabla_x \Psi_1^{1,\epsilon}  + \nabla_y \Psi_1^{1,\epsilon} + \nabla_x \Psi^\epsilon + \frac{1}{\epsilon} \nabla_y \Psi^\epsilon \bigr)
\\
& =  \int_{\Omega_f^\epsilon \times J}  q_s (\hat f_1 - f_1^\epsilon) \,  (\psi_f + \epsilon \psi_f^{1,\epsilon} )
+ \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}  q_s (\hat c_1 - c_1^\epsilon) \,  (\psi_1 + \epsilon \psi_1^{1,\epsilon}  + \psi^\epsilon)
\\
&\quad + \int_{\Omega_m^\epsilon \times J}  q_s (\hat C_1 - C_1^\epsilon) \,  (\Psi_1 + \epsilon \Psi_1^{1,\epsilon}  + \Psi^\epsilon) .
\end{align*}
Letting $\epsilon$ to 0, we get
\begin{align*}
&
 \int_{\Omega \times J} \Bigl( \int_{Y_f} \phi_f(y) dy \Bigr) \,  \partial_t f_1 \, \psi_f
+ \int_{\Omega \times J}  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \Bigl( \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) dy \Bigr) \,  (\partial_t c_1 \, \psi_1 + \partial_t C_1 \, \Psi_1 )
\\
&
 + \int_{\Omega \times J} \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) \bigl( \partial_t c_1 (\psi_1+\psi)+\partial_tC_1 (\Psi_1+\Psi) \bigr)
\\
&
- \int_{\Omega \times J} \int_{Y_f} \frac{k_f}{\mu(f_1)} (\nabla p_f + \nabla_y p_f^1) \cdot (\nabla f_1 + \nabla_y f_1^1)\, \psi_f
\\
&
- \int_{\Omega \times J}  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \int_{Y_m}   \frac{k}{\mu(f_1)} (\alpha \nabla p + \nabla_y \xi_2) \cdot \bigl( (\nabla c_1+ \nabla_y c_1^1)  \psi_1 + (\nabla C_1+ \nabla_y C_1^1)  \Psi_1 \bigr)
\\
&
- \int_{\Omega \times J} \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m}  \frac{k}{\mu}  \nabla_y p^0 \cdot  \bigl(  \nabla_y c_1^0  \, ( \psi_1 + \psi) +  \nabla_y C_1^0  \, ( \Psi_1 + \Psi) \bigr)
\\
&
+ \int_{\Omega \times J} \int_{Y_f} \mathcal{D}\Bigl(\frac{k_f}{\mu(f_1)} (\nabla p_f + \nabla_y p_f^1) \Bigr) (\nabla f_1 + \nabla_y f_1^1) \cdot \bigl( \nabla \psi_f  + \nabla_y \psi_f^{1}  \bigr)
\\
&
 + \int_{\Omega \times J}  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} \mathcal{D}\Bigl(\frac{k}{\mu(f_1)} \bigl( \alpha \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2 \bigr)\Bigr) (\nabla c_1+ \nabla_y c_1^1) \cdot \bigl( \nabla \psi_1  + \nabla_y \psi_1^{1} \bigr)
\\
&
+ \int_{\Omega \times J}  \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} \mathcal{D}\Bigl(\frac{k}{\mu(f_1)} \bigl( \alpha \nabla p_f + \nabla_y \xi_2 \bigr)\Bigr) (\nabla C_1+ \nabla_y C_1^1) \cdot \bigl( \nabla \Psi_1  + \nabla_y \Psi_1^{1} \bigr)
\\
&
+ \int_{\Omega \times J}  \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m}
\mathcal{D}\Bigl(\frac{k}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \Bigr) \bigl( \nabla_y c_1^0 \cdot   \nabla_y \psi + \nabla_y C_1^0 \cdot   \nabla_y \Psi \bigr)
\\
&
=  \int_{\Omega \times J}  \vert Y_f \vert \, q_s (\hat f_1 - f_1) \,  \psi_f
\\
&\quad
+ \int_{\Omega \times J} \int_{Y_m} q_s \bigl(  (\hat c_1 - c_1^0) \,  (\psi_1 + \psi)
 +  (\hat C_1 - C_1^0) \,  (\Psi_1  + \Psi) \bigr).
\end{align*}
Choosing $\psi_f \ne 0$, $\Psi_1=\psi_f/\beta$ and the other test functions
equal to zero, we obtain for instance  the equation satisfies by $f_1$
in $\Omega \times J$.
We finally obtain the following homogenized problem in $\Omega \times J$.
\begin{align}
&
\overline{\phi_f}^{Y_f} \partial_t f_1
+ \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{1}{\beta}  \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \partial_t C_1
+ \chi_{ \Omega_0} \frac{1}{\beta} \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) \, \partial_t C_1^0 dy
\nonumber \\
&
- \frac{K^H_{Y_f}}{\mu(f_1)} \nabla p_f \cdot \nabla f_1
- \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{K^H_{Y_m}}{\beta \mu(f_1)} \nabla p_f \cdot \nabla C_1
- \frac{ \chi_{\Omega_0}}{\beta} \Bigl( \int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y C_1^0 \, dy \Bigr)
\nonumber \\
&
- \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_f (\nabla p_f) \nabla f_1 )
-\chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{1}{\beta}  \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_m (\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1 )
=
q_s \vert Y_f \vert \, (\hat f_1 - f_1)
\nonumber \\
&\quad
+ \frac{1}{\beta} q_s \, \Bigl( \hat C_1 - \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \vert Y_m \vert \, C_1 - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} C_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy
\Bigr),
\label{3.9}
\end{align}
\begin{align}
& \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \partial_t c_1
+  \chi_{ \Omega_0}  \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) \, \partial_t c_1^0 dy
- \frac{\alpha}{\beta}  \overline{\phi}^{Y_m} \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \partial_t C_1
\nonumber \\
&
-  \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \chi_{ \Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} \phi(y) \, \partial_t C_1^0 dy
- \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \frac{K^H_{Y_m}}{\mu(f_1)} \nabla p_f \cdot \bigl( \nabla c_1 - \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \nabla C_1 \bigr)
\nonumber\\
&
- \chi_{\Omega_0}  \int_{Y_m} \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \bigl( \nabla_y c_1^0 - \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \nabla_y C_1^0 \bigr) \, dy
\nonumber\\
&
-\chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_m (\nabla p_f) \nabla c_1 )
+ \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0}  \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \mathop{\rm div} ( \mathcal{D}^H_m (\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1 )
\nonumber\\
&
= q_s  \, \Bigl( \hat c_1 - \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \vert Y_m \vert \, c_1 - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} c_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy \Bigr)
\nonumber\\
&\quad
- \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \, q_s  \, \Bigl( \hat C_1 - \chi_{\Omega \setminus \Omega_0} \vert Y_m \vert \, C_1 - \chi_{\Omega_0} \int_{Y_m} C_1^0(\cdot,y,\cdot) \, dy \Bigr)
,
\label{3.10}
\end{align}
with the boundary conditions
\begin{gather}
 \bigl( \mathcal{D}^H_f(\nabla p_f) \nabla f_1 - \frac{1}{\beta} \mathcal{D}^H_m(\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1
\bigr) \cdot \nu \big|_{\Gamma \times J} =0 ,
\label{3.11}\\
  \bigl( \mathcal{D}^H_m(\nabla p_f) \nabla c_1 - \frac{\alpha}{\beta} \mathcal{D}^H_m(\nabla p_f) \nabla C_1 \bigr) \cdot \nu \big|_{\Gamma \times J} =0 .
\label{3.12}
\end{gather}
Functions $C_1^0$ and $c_1^0$ satisfy the following problem in
$\Omega_0 \times Y_m \times J$.
\begin{gather}
 \phi(y) \partial_t C_1^0
- \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y C_1^0
- \mathop{\rm div}_y \bigl( \mathcal{D}(\frac{k(y)}{\mu}\nabla_y p^0) \nabla_y C_1^0 \bigr)
= q_s \, (\hat C_1 - C_1^0),
\label{3.13}\\
\phi(y) \partial_t c_1^0
- \frac{k(y)}{\mu} \nabla_y p^0 \cdot \nabla_y c_1^0
- \mathop{\rm div}_y \bigl( \mathcal{D}(\frac{k(y)}{\mu}\nabla_y p^0) \nabla_y c_1^0 \bigr)
= q_s \, (\hat c_1 - c_1^0),
\label{3.14}
\end{gather}
The homogenized tensors are defined as follows.
\begin{gather}
{K^H_{Y_f}}_{ij}
=\int_{Y_f} k_f(y)   (\nabla_y  v^i(y)+e^i ) \cdot (\nabla_y v^j(y)+e^j )dy,
\label{3.15}
\\
{K^H_{Y_m}}_{ij}
=\int_{Y_m}\alpha k(y)  (\nabla_y  v^i(y)+e^i ) \cdot (\nabla_y v^j(y)+e^j )dy,
\label{3.16}
\\
{\mathcal{D}^H_f(\nabla p_f)}_{ij}
=\int_{Y_f}  \mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_o )\left(\nabla_y   w^i(x,y)+e^i\right)
 \cdot \big(\nabla_y w^j(x,y)+e^j\big)dy,
\label{3.17}
\\
{\mathcal{D}^H_m(\nabla p_f)}_{ij}
=\int_{Y_m}  \mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_o )\left(\nabla_y   w^i(x,y)+e^i\right)
 \cdot \big(\nabla_y w^j(x,y)+e^j\big)dy,
\label{3.18}
\end{gather}
where $\underline{v}_o $ is defined by
\begin{gather}
\underline{v}_o(x,y,t) = - \chi_f(y) \frac{k_f(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\nabla p_f + \nabla_y p_f^1) - \chi_m(y) \frac{k(y)}{\mu(f_1)} (\alpha \nabla p_f + \nabla \xi_2),
\label{3.19}
\end{gather}
and $w^j(x,t,y)$ is the $Y$-periodic solution of the following
cell-problem  for $(x,t) \in \Omega \times J$:
\begin{equation}
\begin{gathered}
 -\mathop{\rm div}_y \bigl( \mathcal{D}(\underline{v}_o)(\nabla_y w^j+e^j )\bigr)=0
\quad \text{in }   Y,  \\
 \int_Y w^j(x,t,y)\,dy=0,\quad j=1, 2,3.
\end{gathered} \label{3.20}
 \end{equation}
It remains to add some initial conditions.
\begin{gather}
 f_1\big|_{t=0}=f_1^o , \quad c_1\big|_{t=0}=c_1^0\big|_{t=0}=c_1^o
 \quad C_1\big|_{t=0}=C_1^0\big|_{t=0}=C_1^o
 \label{3.21}
 \end{gather}
and to recall that
$$
f_1=\alpha c_1 + \beta C_1  \text{ a.e.   in }  \Omega \times J, \quad
f_1=\beta C_1^0   \text{ a.e.   in } \Omega_0 \times \Gamma_{fm} \times J.
$$
Note that (\ref{3.10}) characterizes  function $c_1-\frac{\alpha}{\beta}C_1$.
Noting that
$C_1=\frac{\beta}{\alpha^2+\beta^2} \bigl( f_1 - \alpha (c_1
- \frac{\alpha}{\beta}C_1) \bigr)$, Equation (\ref{3.9}) then
gives $f_1$.


\subsection*{Acknowledgments}
Research of the author was partially supported by the GNR MoMaS
(PACEN/CNRS, ANDRA, BRGM, CEA, EDF, IRSN) as a part of the project
 \textit{Mod\`eles de dispersion efficace pour des probl\`emes de Chimie-Transport}.


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\end{document}
