Fluid Initiation of Fracture in Dry and Water Saturated Rocks

Author(s):  
Tatiana Kartseva ◽  
Vladimir Smirnov ◽  
Alexander Ponomarev ◽  
Andrey Patonin ◽  
Anna Isaeva ◽  
...  

<p>We present the results of the laboratory studies on fluid-initiated fracture in the samples of porous-fractured rocks that have been initially saturated with a pressure-injected fluid and then tested under increasing fluid pressure in saturated rocks. The tests were conducted at the Geophysical observatory “Borok” of Schmidt Institute of Physics of the Earth of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The laboratory is equipped with electrohydraulic press INOVA-1000. The experiments were conducted on the rock samples with substantially different porosity. The tested samples were made of Buffalo sandstones, granites from the well drilled in the area of Koyna-Warna induced seismicity, and of granites from the well in the Voronezh crystalline massif. The permeability of granite samples was varied by their controlled artificial cracking by successive heating and cooling. A preliminarily dried sample was initially subjected to uniaxial loading in uniform compression (confining pressure). Loading was performed at a constant strain rate until the moment when the growth rate of acoustic emission (AE) activity began to accelerate which indicated that the stress level approaches ultimate strength. Since that, the loading rate was decreased by an order of magnitude, and water was infused into a sample from its top face. The bottom end of a sample was tightly sealed and impermeable to water. After this, the pore pressure in the sample that had got saturated with water to that moment was raised in steps whose amplitudes were varied. The obtained results of the laboratory studies show that the character and intensity of fluid initiation of fracture markedly differ under primary fluid injection into the dry porous-fractured samples and under the subsequent increases of the pore pressure in the saturated samples. The time delay of acoustic response relative to fluid initiation and the amplitude of the response proved to be larger in the case of water injection into dry samples than in the case of raising the pore pressure in saturated samples. The theoretical analysis of fluid propagation in a pore space of an air-filled sample in the model with piston-type air displacement has shown that in the case of water injection into a dry sample, the fluid pressure front propagates more slowly than in the saturated sample.</p><p>Investigation of the acoustic activity and GR b-value responses to the cyclic variations of the pore pressure in the fluid saturated rocks was studied in addition. The changes of b-value were found both for increasing and decreasing of the pore pressure. Obtained laboratory results are similar to results from the investigations of the seasonal variations of the induced seismicity in the area of Koyna-Warna water reservoirs.</p><p>The work was supported partly by the mega-grant program of the Russian Federation Ministry of Science and Education under the project no. 14.W03.31.0033 and partly by the Interdisciplinary Scientific and Educational School of Moscow University «Fundamental and Applied Space Research».</p>

1988 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 2025-2040
Author(s):  
D.W. Simpson ◽  
W.S. Leith ◽  
C.H. Scholz

Abstract The temporal distribution of induced seismicity following the filling of large reservoirs shows two types of response. At some reservoirs, seismicity begins almost immediately following the first filling of the reservoir. At others, pronounced increases in seismicity are not observed until a number of seasonal filling cycles have passed. These differences in response may correspond to two fundamental mechanisms by which a reservoir can modify the strength of the crust—one related to rapid increases in elastic stress due to the load of the reservoir and the other to the more gradual diffusion of water from the reservoir to hypocentral depths. Decreased strength can arise from changes in either elastic stress (decreased normal stress or increased shear stress) or from decreased effective normal stress due to increased pore pressure. Pore pressure at hypocentral depths can rise rapidly, from a coupled elastic response due to compaction of pore space, or more slowly, with the diffusion of water from the surface.


Geophysics ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 948-956 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas H. Green ◽  
Herbert F. Wang

The pore pressure response of saturated porous rock subjected to undrained compression at low effective stresses are investigated theoretically and experimentally. This behavior is quantified by the undrained pore pressure buildup coefficient, [Formula: see text] where [Formula: see text] is fluid pressure, [Formula: see text] is confining pressure, and [Formula: see text] is the mass of fluid per unit bulk volume. The measured values for B for three sandstones and a dolomite arc near 1.0 at zero effective stress and decrease with increasing effective stress. In one sandstone, B is 0.62 at 13 MPa effective stress. These results agree with the theories of Gassmann (1951) and Bishop (1966), which assume a locally homogeneous solid framework. The decrease of B with increasing effective stress is probably related to crack closure and to high‐compressibility materials within the rock framework. The more general theories of Biot (1955) and Brown and Korringa (1975) introduce an additional parameter, the unjacketed pore compressibility, which can be determined from induced pore pressure results. Values of B close to 1 imply that under appropriate conditions within the crust, zones of low effective pressure characterized by low seismic wave velocity and high wave attenuation could exist. Also, in confined aquifer‐reservoir systems at very low effective stress states, the calculated specific storage coefficient is an order of magnitude larger than if less overpressured conditions prevailed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vai Yee Hon ◽  
M Faizzudin Mat Piah ◽  
Noor 'Aliaa M Fauzi ◽  
Peter Schutjens ◽  
Binayak Agarwal ◽  
...  

Abstract An integrated 3D dynamic reservoir geomechanics model can provide a diverse 3D view of depletion-injection-induced field stress changes and the resulting deformation of both reservoir and overburden formations at various field locations. It enables the assessment of reservoir compaction, platform site subsidence, fault reactivation and caprock integrity associated with multiple production and injection reservoirs of the field. We demonstrated this integrated approach for a study field located in the South China Sea, Malaysia, which is planned for water injection for pressure support and EOR scheme thereafter. Reservoir fluid containment during water injection is an important concern because of the intensive geologic faulting and fracturing in the collapsed anticlinal structure, with some faults extending from the reservoirs to shallow depths at or close to the seafloor. Over 30 simulations were done, and most input parameters were systematically varied to gain insight in their effect on result that was of most interest to us: The tendency of fault slip as a function of our operation-induced variations in pore pressure in the reservoir rocks bounding the fault, both during depletion and injection. The results showed that depletion actually reduces the risk of fault slip and of the overburden, while injection-induced increase in pore fluid pressure will lead to a significant increase in the risk of fault slip. Overall, while depletion appears to stabilize the fault and injection appears to destabilize the fault, no fault slip is predicted to occur, not even after a 900psi increase in pore pressure above the pore pressure levels at maximum depletion. We present the model results to demonstrate why depletion and injection have such different effects on fault slip tendency. The interpretation of these geomechanical model results have potential applications beyond the study field, especially for fields with a similar geology and development plan. This is a novel application of 3D dynamic reservoir geomechanics model that cannot be obtained from 1D analytical models alone.


1997 ◽  
Vol 506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Zhang ◽  
Manabu Takahashi ◽  
Tetsuro Esaki

ABSTRACTNearly impermeable host rocks have been recognized as favorable media for many kinds of underground utilization such as radioactive nuclear waste disposal, storage of oil and LP gas, and CAES. To properly evaluate the ability of a geologic medium to retard transmission of fluids, it is necessary to accurately measure its hydraulic properties, most notably the permeability and specific storage. This paper presents a new flow pump permeability test system capable of testing low-permeability rocks under high confining and high pore pressure conditions, which simulate ground pressures at large depths. The new system was used to test the Inada Granite from Japan. The results of present study show that: 1) both permeability and specific storage of the rock are dependent not only on the confining pressure but also on the pore pressure. They decrease with the increment of the effective confining pressure, i.e., the difference between confining and pore pressures; 2) the permeability and specific storage of Inada Granite range from 10−11 to 10−12 cm/s and 10−6 to 10−7 1/cm, respectively. The flow pump technique with its rigorous theoretical analysis can be used to effectively obtain such low permeabilities within several tens of hours; 3) the storage capacity of flow pump system itself decreases with the increment of fluid pressure within the permeating system.


2021 ◽  
Vol 225 (2) ◽  
pp. 968-983
Author(s):  
Nicolas Brantut ◽  
Franciscus M Aben

SUMMARY We present a new type of transducer capable of measuring local pore fluid pressure in jacketed rock samples under elevated confining pressure conditions. The transducers are passive (strain-gauge based), of small size (7 mm in diameter at the contact with the rock and around 10 mm in length), and have minimal dead volume (a few mm3). The transducers measure the differential pressure between the confining fluid and the internal pore pressure. The design is easily adaptable to tune the sensitivity and working pressure range up to several hundred megapascals. An array of four such transducers was tested during hydrostatic pressurization cycles on Darley Dale sandstone and Westerly granite. The prototypes show very good linearity up to 80 MPa with maximum deviations of the order of 0.25 MPa, regardless of the combination of pore and confining pressure. Multiple internal pore pressure measurements allow us to quantify the local decrease in permeability associated with faulting in Darley Dale sandstone, and also prove useful in tracking the development of pore pressure fronts during transient flow in low permeability Westerly granite.


Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noam Z. Dvory ◽  
Mark D. Zoback

We demonstrate that pore pressure and stress changes resulting from several decades of oil and gas production significantly affect the likelihood of injection-related induced seismicity. We illustrate this process in the Delaware Basin (western Texas and southeastern New Mexico, USA), in which hydraulic fracturing and waste-water injection have been inducing numerous earthquakes in the southernmost part of the basin where there has been no prior oil and gas production from the formations in which the earthquakes are now occurring. In the seismically quiescent part of the basin, we show that pore-pressure and poroelastic-stress changes associated with prior oil and gas production make induced seismicity less likely. The findings of this study have important implications for the feasibility of large-scale carbon storage in depleted oil and gas reservoirs.


Geophysics ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 726-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eve S. Sprunt ◽  
Amos Nur

A stressed fluid‐filled porous system was modeled by hollow cylinders of St. Peter sandstone subjected to various combinations of pore and confining pressure at 270° to 280°C for up to four weeks. Large reductions in porosity, up to more than 50 percent, were produced purely by pressure solution without grain crushing. Most of the porosity reduction occurred early in the experiments and in samples with the finer of two grain sizes. Experiments with the same pore pressure, but different confining pressures, and experiments with the same effective stress, but different stress magnitudes showed that a simple effective stress law does not hold for pressure solution, and that the amount of porosity reduction depends on pore fluid pressure. However, nonhydrostatic stress appears to be necessary for rapid porosity reduction because experiments with hydrostatic pressure produced very little change in porosity. Also, experiments with the same confining pressure but different pore pressures showed that the amount of porosity loss is dependent on both pore pressure and effective stress. Pore pressure appears to place an upper limit on the rate of porosity reduction, while nonhydrostatic stress appears to be necessary for rapid porosity reduction. A dry control experiment showed that fluid must be present for porosity reduction at the temperatures and pressures in our study. The porosities of many of the samples in this study were determined both gravimetrically and by point counts on cathodoluminescent micrographs. Cathodoluminescence is useful in studying pressure solution because the intergranular relationships and pore spaces are very distinct. However, in examining natural samples caution is required when relying solely on the luminescence to determine pressure solution, because luminescent characteristics change with time.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (15) ◽  
pp. 4570
Author(s):  
Aman Turakhanov ◽  
Albina Tsyshkova ◽  
Elena Mukhina ◽  
Evgeny Popov ◽  
Darya Kalacheva ◽  
...  

In situ shale or kerogen oil production is a promising approach to developing vast oil shale resources and increasing world energy demand. In this study, cyclic subcritical water injection in oil shale was investigated in laboratory conditions as a method for in situ oil shale retorting. Fifteen non-extracted oil shale samples from Bazhenov Formation in Russia (98 °C and 23.5 MPa reservoir conditions) were hydrothermally treated at 350 °C and in a 25 MPa semi-open system during 50 h in the cyclic regime. The influence of the artificial maturation on geochemical parameters, elastic and microstructural properties was studied. Rock-Eval pyrolysis of non-extracted and extracted oil shale samples before and after hydrothermal exposure and SARA analysis were employed to analyze bitumen and kerogen transformation to mobile hydrocarbons and immobile char. X-ray computed microtomography (XMT) was performed to characterize the microstructural properties of pore space. The results demonstrated significant porosity, specific pore surface area increase, and the appearance of microfractures in organic-rich layers. Acoustic measurements were carried out to estimate the alteration of elastic properties due to hydrothermal treatment. Both Young’s modulus and Poisson’s ratio decreased due to kerogen transformation to heavy oil and bitumen, which remain trapped before further oil and gas generation, and expulsion occurs. Ultimately, a developed kinetic model was applied to match kerogen and bitumen transformation with liquid and gas hydrocarbons production. The nonlinear least-squares optimization problem was solved during the integration of the system of differential equations to match produced hydrocarbons with pyrolysis derived kerogen and bitumen decomposition.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yusuke mukuhira ◽  
Takatoshi Ito ◽  
Michael Fehler ◽  
Elvar K Bjarkason ◽  
Hiroshi Asanuma ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baobin Han ◽  
Peng Cheng ◽  
Yihang Yu ◽  
Wenda Yang ◽  
Zhilin Tian ◽  
...  

<p>Laboratory studies indicated that soil could produce considerable nitrous acid (HONO) emissions, which is the main primary source of hydroxyl radical (OH) in the troposphere. However, very few field observations of HONO emission from soil were reported. In order to relate laboratory results and field measurements, we measured HONO emissions from 7 representative agricultural soils (rice, vegetables, orchards, peanuts, potatoes, sugarcane and maize) in Guangdong under controlled laboratory conditions, and took flux measurements on 2 of them (rice and vegetables) by dynamic chambers in the field. Generally, release rates of HONO from the seven soils increased with temperature and varied with soil moisture, and the optimum release rates can be reached under specific values of water-filled pore space (WFPS), which is considered to be beneficial to nitrification. The seven soils' optimum release rates ranged from 1.24 to 43.19 ng kg<sup>-1</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>, and the Q<sub>10</sub> (It is defined as the multiple of the increase of soil gas emission rate when the temperature increases by 10℃) ranged from 1.03 to 2.25. Formulas were deduced from the lab results to express HONO emissions for every soil. Flux measurements on two soils varied around -1 to 4 ng N m<sup>-2</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>, and both showed similar diurnal variations with peaks around noontime and very low even negative values during nighttime. There were good correlations between HONO fluxes and soil temperature (R<sup>2</sup>=0.5). Furthermore, irrigation enhanced the HONO emission substantially. However, a large discrepancy existed between soil HONO emissions measured in lab and low HONO fluxes in field. More investigations are needed to explain the paradox.</p>


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