期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Digital Humanities
Effects of mechanical layering on hydrofracture emplacement and fluid transport in reservoirs
Philipp, Sonja Leonie1  Gudmundsson, Agust3  Afşar, Filiz4 
[1] Georg-August-University of GöRoyal Holloway University of London, Department of Earth Sciences, Egham, Surrey, Egham, TW20 0EX, United Kingdom;ttingen, D-37077, Germany;ttingen, Geoscience Centre, Structural Geology and Geodynamics, Goldschmidtstr. 3, Gö
关键词: hydrofracture propagation;    Mechanical layering;    Fluid transport;    Local stresses;    fluid reservoirs;    hydrofracture emplacement;   
DOI  :  10.3389/feart.2013.00004
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合)
来源: Frontiers
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【 摘 要 】

Fractures generated by internal fluid pressure, for example, dykes, mineral veins, many joints and man-made hydraulic fractures, are referred to as hydrofractures. Together with shear fractures, they contribute significantly to the permeability of fluid reservoirs such as those of petroleum, geothermal water, and groundwater. Analytical and numerical models show that – in homogeneous host rocks – any significant overpressure in hydrofractures theoretically generates very high crack tip tensile stresses. Consequently, overpressured hydrofractures should propagate and help to form interconnected fracture systems that would then contribute to the permeability of fluid reservoirs. Field observations, however, show that in heterogeneous and anisotropic, e.g., layered, rocks many hydrofractures become arrested or offset at layer contacts and do not form vertically interconnected networks. The most important factors that contribute to hydrofracture arrest are discontinuities (including contacts), stiffness changes between layers, and stress barriers, where the local stress field is unfavourable to hydrofracture propagation. A necessary condition for a hydrofracture to propagate to the surface is that the stress field along its potential path is everywhere favourable to extension-fracture formation so that the probability of hydrofracture arrest is minimised. Mechanical layering and the resulting heterogeneous stress field largely control whether evolving hydrofractures become confined to single layers (strata¬bound frac¬tures) or not (non-stratabound fractures) and, there¬fore, if a vertically intercon¬nec¬ted fracture system forms. Non-stratabound hydrofractures may propagate through many layers and generate interconnected fracture systems. Such systems commonly reach the percolation threshold and largely control the overall permeability of the fluid reservoirs within which they develop.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   

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