The effect of natural fracture heterogeneity on hydraulic fracture performance and seismic response in shale and coal formations
File(s)Joint HF Paper ARMA 2018 Final Accepted Version.pdf (4 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Type
Conference Paper
Abstract
Two 0.3 m × 0.3 m × 0.3 m cubic blocks of shale and coal were used for hydraulic fracturing experiments under true tri-axial stress conditions. The shale block used was highly homogeneous and without visible fractures, while the coal block contained a host of natural fractures. The mechanical and hydraulic properties of both rocks were characterized through multi-stage triaxial tests, Brazilian disk tests, and porosity and permeability measurements. A true tri-axial rock testing machine equipped with loading, pump and acoustic systems was used in the experiment. The acoustic system uses 48 transducers with active sources to repetitively generate and receive ultrasonic P/S wave pulses to reveal fracture initiation and growth. Before the experiment, initial seismic response of both blocks was recorded under hydrostatic stress conditions to characterize anisotropy and heterogeneity of the blocks as reference. Silicon oil was injected centrally into both blocks to create a hydrofracture under deviatoric stress conditions and the load, displacement, pump pressure and volume, and seismic response during the injection process were recorded. Results from two blocks are being compared in terms of hydrofracture geometry and seismic features.
Date Issued
2018-06-17
Date Acceptance
2018-06-17
Citation
52nd U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium, 2018
Publisher
American Rock Mechanics Association.
Journal / Book Title
52nd U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium
Copyright Statement
Copyright © 2018 ARMA, American Rock Mechanics Association. Available by permission of ARMA.
Source
52nd U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium
Publication Status
Published
Start Date
2018-06-17
Finish Date
2018-06-20
Coverage Spatial
Seattle, Washington, USA
Date Publish Online
2018-06-17