4.3 Article

CBM exploration: Permeability of coal owing to cleat and connected fracture

Journal

ENERGY EXPLORATION & EXPLOITATION
Volume 40, Issue 1, Pages 38-56

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/01445987211057195

Keywords

Coal; coalbed methane; permeability; cleat; connected fracture

Categories

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Development Project of Luoyang [2101025A]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51804100, 51774113, U1904126]
  3. Key Science and Technology Research Projects of Henan Province [202102310612]
  4. Science and Technology Innovation Leading Talents of Zhongyuan [214200510030]

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The study shows that the development of fractures in coal affects permeability, with larger fractures leading to higher permeability. The Klinkenberg effect does not exist in ultralow-permeability coal, but significantly increases permeability in coal samples with connected fractures.
Coalbed methane (CBM) resources cannot be efficiently explored and exploited without a robust understanding of the permeability of fracture-size heterogeneities in coal. In this study, two sister coal samples were imparted with pre-developed cleat and connected fractures, and the permeability of the coal samples was measured under different conditions of controlled confining and gas pressures. Furthermore, the implications of the results for CBM exploration and exploitation were discussed. The permeability of coal with cleat development ranged from 0.001-0.01 mD, indicating ultra-low permeability coal. The gas migration in this coal changed from a linear flow to a non-linear flow, with the increase in gas pressure (>1 MPa). Thus, the permeability of the coal initially increased and then decreased. However, the Klinkenberg effect does not exist in this ultralow-permeability coal. For the coal sample with connected fracture, permeability ranged from 0.1-10 mD, which is larger by hundred orders of magnitude than that of the sample with cleat. For this coal, with a decrease in gas pressure (<1 MPa), the Klinkenberg effect significantly increased the permeability of the coal. With an increase in the applied confining pressure, both the Klinkenberg coefficient and permeability of the coal presented a decreasing trend. It is suggested that field fracture investigation is a prerequisite and indispensable step for successful CBM production. The coal beds that cleat network is well conductive to the connected fracture can be an improved target area for CBM production. During CBM production, a variety of flow regimes are available owing to the decrease in CBM reservoir pressure. In particular, under the low CBM reservoir pressure and low in situ geo-stress conditions, the gas migration in the CBM reservoir with connected facture development exhibits remarkable free-molecular flow. Thus, the reservoir permeability and predicted CBM production will be enhanced.

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