Mechanics of Fluid-Driven Fracture Growth in Naturally Fractured Reservoirs With Simple Network Geometries

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Zhang, X.; Jeffrey, R. G.; Thiercelin, M.


2009-12-30


Journal Article


Journal of Geophysical Research-Solid Earth


114


B12406


A numerical model has been developed for fluid-driven opening mode fracture growth in a naturally fractured formation. The rock formation contains discrete deformable fractures, which are initially closed but conductive because of their preexisting apertures. Fluid flow that develops along fractures depends on fracture geometry defined by preexisting aperture distribution, offsets along a fracture path, and intersections of two or more fractures. The model couples fluid flow, elastic deformation, and frictional sliding to obtain the solution, which depends on the competition between fractures for permeability enhancement. The fractures can be opened by fluid pressure that exceeds the normal stress acting on them and by interactions with intersecting closed fractures experiencing Coulomb-type frictional slip. The Newtonian fluid is assumed to flow through the conductive fractures according to a lubrication equation that relates the cube of an equivalent hydraulic aperture to fracture conductivity. The rock material is assumed to be impermeable and elastic. This paper provides the governing equations for the multiple fracture systems and the solution methods used. Flow distribution and fracture growth in conductive fracture sets are simulated for a range of geometric arrangements and hydraulic properties. Numerical results show that elastic interaction between fracture branches plays a controlling role in fluid migration, although initial apertures can give rise to a preferential fluid flow direction during the early stage. In the presence of offsets, fracture segments subject to strong compression are difficult to open hydraulically, and their resulting smaller permeability can increase overall upstream fracture pressure and opening. The patterns of fluid flow become more complicated if fractures intersect each other. A portion of injected fluid is lost into closed empty fractures that cut across the main hydraulic fracture, and this delays the pressure increases required for fracture growth past the crosscutting fracture. The nonlinear fluid loss rate depends on the geometric complexities of the fracture sets and on the fluid viscosity. Sometimes fracture growth can be accelerated by the fast fluid transport along an intersected, relatively conductive natural fracture.


Petroleum Resources; Frictional Bedding Interfaces; Deformable Rock Fracture; Numerical-Simulation; Rough Surfaces; Flow; Model; Propagation; Joints; Permeability; Deflection


Zhang, X, Csiro Petr Resources, Ian Wark Lab, Bayview Ave, Clayton, Vic 3168, Australia. xi.zhang@csiro.au


English


0148-0227


procite:a10acdf6-c365-457c-b18c-bc5781ee2735


Zhang, X.; Jeffrey, R. G.; Thiercelin, M. Mechanics of Fluid-Driven Fracture Growth in Naturally Fractured Reservoirs With Simple Network Geometries. Journal of Geophysical Research-Solid Earth. 2009-12-30; 114:B12406. http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/110142?index=1



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