Numerical model on predicting hydraulic fracture propagation in low-permeability sandstone

2020 ◽  
pp. 105678952096320
Author(s):  
Ji Shi ◽  
Jianhua Zhang ◽  
Chunyang Zhang ◽  
Tingting Jiang ◽  
Gang Huang

Hydraulic fracture propagation is hard to predict due to natural joints and crustal stress. This process may lead to uncontrollable changes in hydrogeological conditions. Therefore, prediction and control of fracture propagation are paramount to permeability increase in ore-bearing reservoir. The coupled fluid-solid model was utilized to predict the hydraulic fracture propagation in low-permeability sandstone of a uranium mine. For this study, the model was modified to allow fractures to propagate randomly by using the cohesive zone method. The simulation was developed on a three-step process. First, geological data required to run the model, including crustal stress, strength and permeability, were assembled. Next, fracture propagation under different conditions of stress and injection volume were simulated. In the final step, experimental data required to validate the model were obtained. The simulation results indicate that the principal stress, distribution and orientation of natural fracture have vital influence on fracture propagation and induced complex fracture network. This work provides a theoretical basis for the application of hydraulic fracture in low-permeability sandstone reservoir and ensures the possibility to predict the generation of complex fracture network.

Processes ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (8) ◽  
pp. 113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shen Wang ◽  
Huamin Li ◽  
Dongyin Li

To investigate the mechanism of hydraulic fracture propagation in coal seams with discontinuous natural fractures, an innovative finite element meshing scheme for modeling hydraulic fracturing was proposed. Hydraulic fracture propagation and interaction with discontinuous natural fracture networks in coal seams were modeled based on the cohesive element method. The hydraulic fracture network characteristics, the growth process of the secondary hydraulic fractures, the pore pressure distribution and the variation of bottomhole pressure were analyzed. The improved cohesive element method, which considers the leak-off and seepage behaviors of fracturing liquid, is capable of modeling hydraulic fracturing in naturally fractured formations. The results indicate that under high stress difference conditions, the hydraulic fracture network is spindle-shaped, and shows a multi-level branch structure. The ratio of secondary fracture total length to main fracture total length was 2.11~3.62, suggesting that the secondary fractures are an important part of the hydraulic fracture network in coal seams. In deep coal seams, the break pressure of discontinuous natural fractures mainly depends on the in-situ stress field and the direction of natural fractures. The mechanism of hydraulic fracture propagation in deep coal seams is significantly different from that in hard and tight rock layers.


Author(s):  
Yunsuk Hwang ◽  
Jiajing Lin ◽  
David Schechter ◽  
Ding Zhu

Multiple hydraulic fracture treatments in reservoirs with natural fractures create complex fracture networks. Predicting well performance in such a complex fracture network system is an extreme challenge. The statistical nature of natural fracture networks changes the flow characteristics from that of a single linear fracture. Simply using single linear fracture models for individual fractures, and then summing the flow from each fracture as the total flow rate for the network could introduce significant error. In this paper we present a semi-analytical model by a source method to estimate well performance in a complex fracture network system. The method simulates complex fracture systems in a more reasonable approach. The natural fracture system we used is fractal discrete fracture network model. We then added multiple dominating hydraulic fractures to the natural fracture system. Each of the hydraulic fractures is connected to the horizontal wellbore, and some of the natural fractures are connected to the hydraulic fractures through the network description. Each fracture, natural or hydraulically induced, is treated as a series of slab sources. The analytical solution of superposed slab sources provides the base of the approach, and the overall flow from each fracture and the effect between the fractures are modeled by applying the superposition principle to all of the fractures. The fluid inside the natural fractures flows into the hydraulic fractures, and the fluid of the hydraulic fracture from both the reservoir and the natural fractures flows to the wellbore. This paper also shows that non-Darcy flow effects have an impact on the performance of fractured horizontal wells. In hydraulic fracture calculation, non-Darcy flow can be treated as the reduction of permeability in the fracture to a considerably smaller effective permeability. The reduction is about 2% to 20%, due to non-Darcy flow that can result in a low rate. The semi-analytical solution presented can be used to efficiently calculate the flow rate of multistage-fractured wells. Examples are used to illustrate the application of the model to evaluate well performance in reservoirs that contain complex fracture networks.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (23) ◽  
pp. 4477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heng Zheng ◽  
Chunsheng Pu ◽  
CHOE TONG IL

Hydraulic fracturing is an essential technique for the development of shale gas, due to the low permeability in formation. Abundant natural fractures contained in a formation are indispensable for the development of a fracture network. In this paper, a damage-stress-seepage coupled hydraulic fracture expansion model, based on the extended finite element method, is established. The simulation results show that shear failure occurs when the hydraulic fracture interacts with a frictional natural fracture, while tensile failure occurs when it interacts with a cement natural fracture. Low interaction angles and high tensile strength of the rock are beneficial for the generation of a complex fracture network. Furthermore, under the same geological conditions and injection parameters, frictional natural fractures are more beneficial for the generation of a complex fracture network, when compared with cement natural fractures. This can not only effectively increase the propagation length of the natural fracture, but also effectively reduce its reactive resistance. This research is of great significance for the efficient exploitation of unconventional oil and gas resources.


Author(s):  
Hannes Hofmann ◽  
Tayfun Babadagli ◽  
Günter Zimmermann

The creation of large complex fracture networks by hydraulic fracturing is imperative for enhanced oil recovery from tight sand or shale reservoirs, tight gas extraction, and Hot-Dry-Rock (HDR) geothermal systems to improve the contact area to the rock matrix. Although conventional fracturing treatments may result in bi-wing fractures, there is evidence by microseismic mapping that fracture networks can develop in many unconventional reservoirs, especially when natural fracture systems are present and the differences between the principle stresses are low. However, not much insight is gained about fracture development as well as fluid and proppant transport in naturally fractured tight formations. In order to clarify the relationship between rock and treatment parameters, and resulting fracture properties, numerical simulations were performed using a commercial Discrete Fracture Network (DFN) simulator. A comprehensive sensitivity analysis is presented to identify typical fracture network patterns resulting from massive water fracturing treatments in different geological conditions. It is shown how the treatment parameters influence the fracture development and what type of fracture patterns may result from different treatment designs. The focus of this study is on complex fracture network development in different natural fracture systems. Additionally, the applicability of the DFN simulator for modeling shale gas stimulation and HDR stimulation is critically discussed. The approach stated above gives an insight into the relationships between rock properties (specifically matrix properties and characteristics of natural fracture systems) and the properties of developed fracture networks. Various simulated scenarios show typical conditions under which different complex fracture patterns can develop and prescribe efficient treatment designs to generate these fracture systems. Hydraulic stimulation is essential for the production of oil, gas, or heat from ultratight formations like shales and basement rocks (mainly granite). If natural fracture systems are present, the fracturing process becomes more complex to simulate. Our simulation results reveal valuable information about main parameters influencing fracture network properties, major factors leading to complex fracture network development, and differences between HDR and shale gas/oil shale stimulations.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. SU17-SU31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian Huang ◽  
Reza Safari ◽  
Uno Mutlu ◽  
Kevin Burns ◽  
Ingo Geldmacher ◽  
...  

Natural fractures can reactivate during hydraulic stimulation and interact with hydraulic fractures producing a complex and highly productive natural-hydraulic fracture network. This phenomenon and the quality of the resulting conductive reservoir area are primarily functions of the natural fracture network characteristics (e.g., spacing, height, length, number of fracture sets, orientation, and frictional properties); in situ stress state (e.g., stress anisotropy and magnitude); stimulation design parameters (e.g., pumping schedule, the type/volume of fluid[s], and proppant); well architecture (number and spacing of stages, perforation length, well orientation); and the physics of the natural-hydraulic fracture interaction (e.g., crossover, arrest, reactivation). Geomechanical models can quantify the impact of key parameters that control the extent and complexity of the conductive reservoir area, with implications to stimulation design and well optimization in the field. We have developed a series of geomechanical simulations to predict natural-hydraulic fracture interaction and the resulting fracture network in complex settings. A geomechanics-based sensitivity analysis was performed that integrated key reservoir-geomechanical parameters to forward model complex fracture network generation, synthetic microseismic (MS) response, and associated conductivity paths as they evolve during stimulation operations. The simulations tested two different natural-hydraulic fracture interaction scenarios and could generate synthetic MS events. The sensitivity analysis revealed that geomechanical models that involve complex fracture networks can be calibrated against MS data and can help to predict the reservoir response to stimulation and optimize the conductive reservoir area. We analyzed a field data set (obtained from two hydraulically fractured wells in the Barnett Formation, Tarrant County, Texas) and established a coupling between the geomechanics and MS within the framework of a 3D geologic model. This coupling provides a mechanics-based approach to (1) verify MS trends and anomalies in the field, (2) optimize conductive reservoir area for reservoir simulations, and (3) improve stimulation design on the current well in near-real-time and well design/stimulation for future wells.


Lithosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (Special 4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yulong Zhang ◽  
Bei Han ◽  
Xin Zhang ◽  
Yun Jia ◽  
Chun Zhu

Abstract The interaction mode of induced fracture and natural fracture plays an important role in prediction of hydraulic fracture propagation. In this paper, a two-dimensional hydromechanical coupled discrete element model is first introduced in the framework of particle flow simulation, which can well take into account mechanical and hydraulic properties of rock samples with natural fracture. The model’s parameters are strictly calibrated by conducting numerical simulations of uniaxial compression test and direct tensile and shear tests, as well as fluid flow test. The effectiveness of coupled model is also assessed by describing hydraulic fracture propagation in two representative cases, respectively, rock samples with and without preexisting fracture. With this model in hand, the effects of interaction between induced and natural fractures with different approach angles and differential stresses on fluid injection pressure and fracture propagation patterns are investigated and discussed. Results suggest that the interaction modes mainly involve three basic behaviors including the arrested, captured with offset, and directly crossing. For a given differential stress, the captured offset of hydraulic fracture by natural fracture gradually decreases with the approach angle increase, while for a fixed approach angle, that captured offset increases with differential stress decrease.


2020 ◽  
pp. 014459872097251
Author(s):  
Wenguang Duan ◽  
Baojiang Sun ◽  
Deng Pan ◽  
Tao Wang ◽  
Tiankui Guo ◽  
...  

The tight sandstone oil reservoirs characterized by the low porosity and permeability must be hydraulically fractured to obtain the commercial production. Nevertheless, the post-fracturing production of tight oil reservoirs is not always satisfactory. The influence mechanism of various factors on the fracture propagation in the tight oil reservoirs needs further investigation to provide an optimized fracturing plan, obtain an expected fracture morphology and increase the oil productivity. Thus, the horizontal well fracturing simulations were carried out in a large-scale true tri-axial test system with the samples from the Upper Triassic Yanchang Fm tight sandstone outcrops in Yanchang County, Shaanxi, China, and the results were compared with those of fracturing simulations of the shale outcrop in the 5th member of Xujiahe Fm (abbreviated as the Xu 5th Member) in the Sichuan Basin. The effects of the natural fracture (NF) development degree, horizontal in-situ stress conditions, fracturing treatment parameters, etc. on the hydraulic fracture (HF) propagation morphology were investigated. The results show that conventional hydraulic fracturing of the tight sandstone without NFs only produces a single double-wing primary fracture. The fracture propagation path in the shale or the tight sandstone with developed NFs is controlled by the high horizontal differential stress. The higher stress difference (<12MPa) facilitates forming the complex fracture network. It is recommended to fracture the reservoir with developed NFs by injecting the high-viscosity guar gum firstly and the low-viscosity slick water then to increase the SRV. The low-to-high variable rate fracturing method is recommended as the low injection rate facilitates the fracturing fluid filtration into the NF system, and the high injection rate increases the net pressure within the fracture. The dual-horizontal well simultaneous fracturing increases the HF density and enhances the HF complexity in the reservoir, and significantly increases the possibility of forming the complex fracture network. The fracturing pressure curves reflect the fracture propagation status. According to statistical analysis, the fracturing curves are divided into types corresponding to multi-bedding plane (BP) opening, single fracture generation, multi-fracture propagation under variable rate fracturing, and forming of the fracture network through communicating the HF with NFs. The results provide a reference for the study of the HF propagation mechanism and the fracturing design in the tight sandstone reservoirs.


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