Far field poroelastic response of geothermal reservoirs to hydraulic stimulation treatment: Theory and application at the Groß Schönebeck geothermal research facility

Author(s):  
Antoine B. Jacquey ◽  
Luca Urpi ◽  
Mauro Cacace ◽  
Guido Blöcher ◽  
Günter Zimmermann ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (12) ◽  
pp. 893-900
Author(s):  
Inga Berre ◽  
Ivar Stefansson ◽  
Eirik Keilegavlen

Hydraulic stimulation of geothermal reservoirs in low-permeability basement and crystalline igneous rock can enhance permeability by reactivation and shear dilation of existing fractures. The process is characterized by interaction between fluid flow, deformation, and the fractured structure of the formation. The flow is highly affected by the fracture network, which in turn is deformed because of hydromechanical stress changes caused by the fluid injection. This process-structure interaction is decisive for the outcome of hydraulic stimulation, and, in analysis of governing mechanisms, physics-based modeling has potential to complement field and experimental data. Here, we show how recently developed simulation technology is a valuable tool to understand governing mechanisms of hydromechanical coupled processes and the reactivation and deformation of faults. The methodology fully couples flow in faults and matrix with poroelastic matrix deformation and a contact mechanics model for the faults, including dilation because of slip. Key elements are high aspect ratios of faults and strong nonlinearities in highly coupled governing equations. Example simulations using our open-source software illustrate direct and indirect hydraulic fault reactivation and corresponding permeability enhancement. We investigate the effect of the fault and matrix permeability and the Biot coefficient. A higher matrix permeability leads to more leakage from a permeable fault and thus suppresses reactivation and slip of the fault compared to the case with a lower matrix permeability. If a fault is a barrier to flow, increase of pressure because of the fluid injection results in stabilization of the fault; the situation is opposite if the fault is highly permeable compared to the matrix. For the given setup, lowering the Biot coefficient results in more slip than the base case. While conceptually simple, the examples illustrate the strong hydromechanical couplings and the prospects of physics-based numerical models in investigating the dynamics.


Author(s):  
N. Bonnet ◽  
M. Troyon ◽  
P. Gallion

Two main problems in high resolution electron microscopy are first, the existence of gaps in the transfer function, and then the difficulty to find complex amplitude of the diffracted wawe from registered intensity. The solution of this second problem is in most cases only intended by the realization of several micrographs in different conditions (defocusing distance, illuminating angle, complementary objective apertures…) which can lead to severe problems of contamination or radiation damage for certain specimens.Fraunhofer holography can in principle solve both problems stated above (1,2). The microscope objective is strongly defocused (far-field region) so that the two diffracted beams do not interfere. The ideal transfer function after reconstruction is then unity and the twin image do not overlap on the reconstructed one.We show some applications of the method and results of preliminary tests.Possible application to the study of cavitiesSmall voids (or gas-filled bubbles) created by irradiation in crystalline materials can be observed near the Scherzer focus, but it is then difficult to extract other informations than the approximated size.


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