Literature DB >> 30635428

Branching of hydraulic cracks enabling permeability of gas or oil shale with closed natural fractures.

Saeed Rahimi-Aghdam1, Viet-Tuan Chau2, Hyunjin Lee1, Hoang Nguyen1, Weixin Li1, Satish Karra2, Esteban Rougier2, Hari Viswanathan2, Gowri Srinivasan3, Zdeněk P Bažant4,5,6.   

Abstract

While hydraulic fracturing technology, aka fracking (or fraccing, frac), has become highly developed and astonishingly successful, a consistent formulation of the associated fracture mechanics that would not conflict with some observations is still unavailable. It is attempted here. Classical fracture mechanics, as well as current commercial software, predict vertical cracks to propagate without branching from the perforations of the horizontal well casing, which are typically spaced at 10 m or more. However, to explain the gas production rate at the wellhead, the crack spacing would have to be only about 0.1 m, which would increase the overall gas permeability of shale mass about 10,000×. This permeability increase has generally been attributed to a preexisting system of orthogonal natural cracks, whose spacing is about 0.1 m. However, their average age is about 100 million years, and a recent analysis indicated that these cracks must have been completely closed by secondary creep of shale in less than a million years. Here it is considered that the tectonic events that produced the natural cracks in shale must have also created weak layers with nanocracking or microcracking damage. It is numerically demonstrated that seepage forces and a greatly enhanced permeability along the weak layers, with a greatly increased transverse Biot coefficient, must cause the fracking to engender lateral branching and the opening of hydraulic cracks along the weak layers, even if these cracks are initially almost closed. A finite element crack band model, based on a recently developed anisotropic spherocylindrical microplane constitutive law, demonstrates these findings [Rahimi-Aghdam S, et al. (2018) arXiv:1212.11023].

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biot coefficient; damage; fracking; poromechanics; seepage forces

Year:  2019        PMID: 30635428      PMCID: PMC6358701          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1818529116

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  1 in total

1.  Growth model for large branched three-dimensional hydraulic crack system in gas or oil shale.

Authors:  Viet T Chau; Zdeněk P Bažant; Yewang Su
Journal:  Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2016-10-13       Impact factor: 4.226

  1 in total
  1 in total

1.  New perspective of fracture mechanics inspired by gap test with crack-parallel compression.

Authors:  Hoang Nguyen; Madura Pathirage; Masoud Rezaei; Mohsen Issa; Gianluca Cusatis; Zdeněk P Bažant
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-06-09       Impact factor: 11.205

  1 in total

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