1 MODELING OF HYDRAULIC FRACTURES. 2 HYDRAULIC FRACTURES Hydraulic fracturing can be broadly defined as the process by which a fracture initiates and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SINTEF Petroleum Research The strength of fractured rock Erling Fjær SINTEF Petroleum Research 1.
Advertisements

Lecture 25 Bodies With Holes / Stress Perturbations Around Cracks Geol 542 Textbook reading: p ;
Stress and Deformation: Part II (D&R, ; ) 1. Anderson's Theory of Faulting 2. Rheology (mechanical behavior of rocks) - Elastic: Hooke's.
2012 Williston Basin Petroleum Conference
Constitutive Equations CASA Seminar Wednesday 19 April 2006 Godwin Kakuba.
Rheology II.
1 Thin Walled Pressure Vessels. 2 Consider a cylindrical vessel section of: L = Length D = Internal diameter t = Wall thickness p = fluid pressure inside.
Terra Slicing Technology Overview.
Distribution of Microcracks in Rocks Uniform As in igneous rocks where microcrack density is not related to local structures but rather to a pervasive.
1 An Unconventional Bonanza Enhanced Oil & Gas Recovery Copyright TBD America, Inc. All rights reserved. Dr. Barry Stevens President TBD America,
HRR Integral Recall with is the integration constant.
Chapter 12: (Static) Equilibrium and Elasticity
PETE 203 DRILLING ENGINEERING
Ground-Water Flow and Solute Transport for the PHAST Simulator Ken Kipp and David Parkhurst.
Deformation of Solids Stress is proportional to Strain stress = elastic modulus * strain The SI unit for stress is the Newton per meter squared (N/m 2.
Hydraulic Fracture: multiscale processes and moving interfaces Anthony Peirce Department of Mathematics University of British Columbia Nanoscale Material.
4/16/2017 Hydraulic Fracturing Short Course, Texas A&M University College Station Fracture Design Fracture Dimensions Fracture Modeling.
Dynamic Earth Class February 2005.
One dimensional models of hydraulic fracture Anthony Peirce (UBC) Collaborators: Jose` Adachi (SLB) Shira Daltrop (UBC) Emmanuel Detournay (UMN) WITS University.
Impression-Die Forging (cont’d) F=K p Y f A –K p – presure multiplying factor Simple shapes (without flash): 3-5 Simple shapes (with flash): 5-8 Complex.
Mechanics of Materials II UET, Taxila Lecture No. (3)
Hydraulic Fracturing 101. What is Hydraulic Fracturing? Hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking”, is the process of drilling and injecting fluid into the ground.
Mechanics of Materials II
Beams Beams: Comparison with trusses, plates t
CEE 262A H YDRODYNAMICS Lecture 1* Introduction and properties of fluids *Adapted from notes by Prof. Stephen Monismith 1.
Lesson 12 Laminar Flow - Slot Flow
Principal Investigators: Ding Zhu and A. D. Hill
Chapter 9 Static Equilibrium; Elasticity and Fracture
Engineering Doctorate – Nuclear Materials Development of Advanced Defect Assessment Methods Involving Weld Residual Stresses If using an image in the.
Schlumberger Public Scope and Application of Pressure Transient Tests in CBM and Shale Gas reservoirs Baijayanta Ghosh Reservoir Domain Champion Testing.
We greatly appreciate the support from the for this project Interpreting Mechanical Displacements During Hydromechanical Well Tests in Fractured Rock Hydromechanical.
8 th Trondheim Conference on CO 2 Capture, Transport and Storage TCCS-8, 19 – 18 June 2015 Loss of injectivity and formation integrity due to pressure.
- D TR ADPE / A © FORCE shale seminar 18 &19 Sept Stavanger Stress determination and pore pressure measurements performed at the Meuse/Haute-Marne.
Induced Slip on a Large-Scale Frictional Discontinuity: Coupled Flow and Geomechanics Antonio Bobet Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN Virginia Tech,
Folds, Faults, and Geologic Maps
Perforating Requirements for Fracture Stimulation
ELASTIC PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS
Mokashi Imrankhan Sherkhan Guided by: M S Bobji Seminar on.
6. Elastic-Plastic Fracture Mechanics
3. Stresses in Machine Elements Lecture Number – 3.1 Prof. Dr. C. S. Pathak Department of Mechanical Engineering Sinhgad College of Engineering, Pune Strength.
Definition of Soft Sand
Two Dimensional Hydraulic Fracture Simulations Using FRANC2D
Fracture Overview Fall Figure 6.1 Rectangular plate with hole subjected to axial load. (a) Plate with cross-sectional plane;
Applied mechanics of solids A.F. Bower.
Web-based Class Project on Rock Mechanics REPORT PREPARED AS PART OF COURSE CEE 544: ROCK MECHANICS WINTER 2015 SEMESTER INSTRUCTOR: PROFESSOR DIMITRIOS.
Soil Mechanics-II STRESS DISTRIBUTION IN SOILS DUE TO SURFACE LOADS
Creep, compaction and the weak rheology of major faults Norman H. Sleep & Michael L. Blanpied Ge 277 – February 19, 2010.
Lecture 7 Mechanical Properties of Rocks
CIVIL ENGINEERING. Civil engineering work includes: dams embankments motorways bridges buildings cuttings quarries tunnels mines All these need to take.
EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICS THE EXPLORATION TASK PLAN EXPLORATION APPROACH FOR A MATURE TREND GATHER DATA FOR A MATURE TREND DEVELOP PLAY PROSPECT FRAMEWORK.
Effects of Natural Fracture Reactivation during Hydraulic Fracturing of the Barnett Shale, Fort Worth Basin TX Seth Busetti October 2010 ConocoPhillips.
Brittle Deformation Remember that  is the angle between  3 and a plane.
BEARING CAPACITY OF SOIL Session 3 – 4
Processing of a well bottom zone Integrated physicochemical effect presentation (cracks formation methods using pulsed-wave force)
1 Structural Geology Brittle Deformation 1 Lecture 12 – Spring 2016.
©2007 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. M P Groover, Fundamentals of Modern Manufacturing 3/e MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS 1.Hardness 2.Effect of Temperature.
THE DYNAMIC EVOLUTION OF TWISTED MAGNETIC FLUX TUBES IN A THREE-DIMENSIONALCONVECTING FLOW. II. TURBULENT PUMPING AND THE COHESION OF Ω-LOOPS.
Date of download: 6/26/2016 Copyright © ASME. All rights reserved. From: Numerical Simulation of Complex Fracture Network Development by Hydraulic Fracturing.
PLASTIC ANALYSIS OF BEAMS - SANDEEP DIGAVALLI. AT A GLANCE OF THIS TOPIC  BASIS OF PLASTIC THEORY  STRESS-STRAIN CURVE OF PLASTIC MATERIALS  STRESSES.
Hydraulic Fracturing 101.
Soil Mechanics-II STRESS DISTRIBUTION IN SOILS DUE TO SURFACE LOADS
Shear in Straight Members Shear Formula Shear Stresses in Beams
The SPE Foundation through member donations
Stress – Strain Relationships Credit: Modified from:
Thin Walled Pressure Vessels
Physical Properties of Rocks
Mokashi Imrankhan Sherkhan Guided by: M S Bobji Seminar on.
Dr. Ali Daneshy Daneshy Consultants Int’l
DR. AL EMRAN ISMAIL FRACTURE MECHANISMS.
AMAN ULLAH ROLL NO O1 PRESENTATION TOPIC TIGHT RESERVIOR AND HYDRAULIC FRACTURING.
Presentation transcript:

1 MODELING OF HYDRAULIC FRACTURES

2 HYDRAULIC FRACTURES Hydraulic fracturing can be broadly defined as the process by which a fracture initiates and propagates due to hydraulic loading (i.e., pressure) applied by a fluid inside the fracture. Hydraulic fracturing is a complicated process to model, as it involves the coupling of at least three processes: (i) the mechanical deformation induced by the fluid pressure on the fracture surfaces; (ii) the flow of fluid within the fracture; (iii) the fracture propagation.

3 HYDRAULIC FRACTURES creation of an initial path for the fracture (‘‘perforation’’ - specially designed shaped-charges are blasted on the wellbore walls with given orientations, perforating the casing and creating finger-like holes or weak points in the hydrocarbon-laden formation) a viscous fluid is pumped inside the wellbore, inducing a steep rise in the pressure which eventually leads to the initiation of a fracture at the perforated interval. a ‘‘pad’’ of clean fluid is usually pumped first, to provide sufficient fracture width for the proppant that follows. proppant is injected at a later stage as a suspension or slurry. at the end of the treatment, when pumping stops, leak-off of the residual fracturing fluid into the porous reservoir allows the fracture surfaces to close onto the proppant pack under the action of the far-field compressive stresses.

4 POSSIBLE PROBLEMS prediction of fracture geometry effective prevention of crack closure optimal choice of fracturing fluid fluid leak-off avoid screenouts caused by proppant a bridging and holdup proppant flowback

5 MODEL ASSUMPTIONS the material of the reservoir is considered to be linearly elastic in the case of layered reservoir layers are parallel and perfectly paired the fracture occurs in the same vertical plane accepted model of Newtonian fluid One don’t need to take into account inelastic (plastic) behavior of the breed non-parallelism and imperfect conjugation of surface layers the real geometry of the crack natural fracturing the initial inhomogeneous stress fields caused, in particular, porosity patterns compressibility, plasticity, viscoelasticity of the fluid the impact of leakage on the pressure inside the cracks

6 KGD Model For the horizontal plane strain geometry, the fracture zone should deform independently of the upper and lower layers. This would occur for free slippage on these layers, or approximately represent a fracture with a horizontal penetration much smaller than the vertical one. The fracture shape should not depend on the vertical position. Such a geometry is shown in Fig. 3-5; it has a constant and uniform height and a rectangular cross section (Khristianovic and Zheltov, 1955; Geema and de Klerk, 1969-KGD Model). Crack opening is solved in the horizontal plane.

7 PKN Model A second situation exists when there is a large confinement, hence the fracture is limited to a given zone. Perkins and Kern (1961) and Nordgren (1972) considered the plane strain assumption in vertical planes, so each vertical cross section deforms independently of the others (PKN Model). However, the fracture widths in vertical planes are coupled through the fluid-flow and continuity equations. Since there is no vertical extension (or fluid flow) in each vertical section, the pressure is uniform.This case would approximate a fracture with a horizontal penetration much larger than the vertical penetration. Crack opening is solved in the vertical plane.

8 REFERENCES Adachi J., Siebrits E., Peirce A., Desroches J. Computer simulation of hydraulic fractures // Int. J. of Rock Mechanics & Mining Sciences, 44, 2007 Michael. J. Economides, Kenneth G. Nolte Reservoir Stimulation

9 Thank you for your attention!