scholarly journals Stress-sensitivity analysis of rock mechanical and petrophysical properties of fractured tight sandstone under true-triaxial stresses in the laboratory

2021 ◽  
Vol 861 (2) ◽  
pp. 022049
Author(s):  
Jiaying Li ◽  
Chunyan Qi ◽  
Ye Gu ◽  
Yu Ye ◽  
Jie Zhang ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaying Li ◽  
Chunyan Qi ◽  
Ye Gu ◽  
Yu Ye ◽  
Jie Zhao

Abstract The characteristics of seepage capability and rock strain during reservoir depletion are important for reservoir recovery, which would significantly influence production strategy optimization. The Cretaceous deep natural gas reservoirs in Keshen Gasfield in Tarim Basin are mainly buried over 5000 m, featuring with ultra-low permeability, developed natural fractures and complex in-situ stress states. However, there is no comprehensive study on the variation of mechanical properties and seepage capability of this gas reservoir under in-situ stress conditions and most studies on stress-sensitivity are conducted under conventional triaxial or uniaxial stress conditions, which cannot truly represent in-situ stress environment. In this work, Cretaceous tight sandstone in Keshen Gasfield was tested under true-triaxial stresses conditions by an advanced geophysical imaging true-triaxial testing system to study the stress-sensitivity and anisotropy of rock stress-strain behavior, porosity and permeability. Four groups of sandstone samples are prepared as the size of 80mm×80mm×80mm, three of which are artificially fractured with different angle (0°,15°,30°) to simulate hydraulic fracturing. The test results corresponding to different samples are compared to further reveal the influence of the fracture angle on rock mechanical properties and seepage capability. The samples are in elastic strain during reservoir depletion, showing an apparent correlation with fracture angles. The porosity decreases linearly with stress loading, where the decrease rate of effective porosity of fracture samples is significantly higher than that of intact samples. The permeabilities decrease exponentially and show significant anisotropy in different principal stress directions, especially in σH direction. The mechanical properties and seepage capability of deep tight sandstone are successfully tested under true-triaxial stresses conditions in this work, which reveals the stress-sensitivity of anisotropic permeability, porosity and stress-strain behavior during gas production. The testing results proposed in this paper provides an innovative method to analyse rock mechanical and petrophysical properties and has profound significance on exploration and development of tight gas reservoir.


Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Yongchao Xue ◽  
Qingshuang Jin ◽  
Hua Tian

Finding ways to accelerate the effective development of tight sandstone gas reservoirs holds great strategic importance in regard to the improvement of consumption pattern of world energy. The pores and throats of the tight sandstone gas reservoir are small with abundant interstitial materials. Moreover, the mechanism of gas flow is highly complex. This paper is based on the research of a typical tight sandstone gas reservoir in Changqing Oilfield. A strong stress sensitivity in tight sandstone gas reservoir is indicated by the results, and it would be strengthened with the water production; at the same time, a rise to start-up pressure gradient would be given by the water producing process. With the increase in driving pressure gradient, the relative permeability of water also increases gradually, while that of gas decreases instead. Following these results, a model of gas-water two-phase flow has been built, keeping stress sensitivity, start-up pressure gradient, and the change of relative permeability in consideration. It is illustrated by the results of calculations that there is a reduction in the duration of plateau production period and the gas recovery factor during this period if the stress sensitivity and start-up pressure gradient are considered. In contrast to the start-up pressure gradient, stress sensitivity holds a greater influence on gas well productivity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 265 ◽  
pp. 105444
Author(s):  
Zhi Zheng ◽  
Xia-Ting Feng ◽  
Cheng-Xiang Yang ◽  
Xi-Wei Zhang ◽  
Shao-Jun Li ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 499 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vamegh Rasouli ◽  
Mohammad Sarmadivaleh ◽  
Amin Nabipour

Hydraulic fracturing is a technique used to enhance production from low quality oil and gas reservoirs. This approach is the key technique specifically in developing unconventional reservoirs, such as tight formations and shale gas. During its propagation, the hydraulic fracture may arrive at different interfaces. The mechanical properties and bounding quality of the interface as well as insitu stresses are among the most significant parameters that determine the interaction mechanism, i.e. whether the hydraulic fracture stops, crosses or experiences an offset upon its arrival at the interface. The interface could be a natural fracture, an interbed, layering or any other weakness feature. In addition to the interface parameters, the rock types of the two sides of the interface may affect the interaction mechanism. To study the interaction mechanism, hydraulic fracturing experiments were conducted using a true triaxial stress cell on two cube samples of 15 cm. Sample I had a sandstone block in the middle surrounded by mortar, whereas in sample II the location of mortar and tight sandstone blocks were changed. The results indicated that besides the effect of the far field stress magnitudes, the heterogeneity of the formation texture and interface properties can have a dominant effect in propagation characteristics of an induced fracture.


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