4.6 Article

Effect of gravel on rock failure in glutenite reservoirs under different confining pressures

Journal

PETROLEUM SCIENCE
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 3022-3036

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.petsci.2023.04.006

Keywords

Glutenite; Heterogeneity; Failure mode; Triaxial compression test; Shear dilatancy; Shear compaction

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Due to the existence of gravel, the failure mode of glutenite is not only controlled by confining pressure, but also influenced by the gravel. The failure of glutenite is characterized by producing cracks around gravels, and the distribution patterns of cracks vary under different confining pressures.
Due to the existence of gravel, glutenite is heterogeneous and different from fine-grained rocks such as sandstone and shale in structure. To fully understand the effect of gravel on failure mode in glutenite, we performed triaxial compression tests on different glutenites. The results indicate that failure modes of glutenite are complex due to the existence of gravel. Under different confining pressures, three failure modes were observed. The first failure mode, a tensile failure under uniaxial compression, produces multiple tortuous longitudinal cracks. In this failure mode, the interaction between gravels provides the lateral tensile stress for rock splitting. The second failure mode occurs under low and medium confining pressure and produces a crack band composed of micro-cracks around gravels. This failure mode con-forms to the Mohr-Coulomb criterion and is generated by shear failure. In this failure mode, shear dilatancy and shear compaction may occur under different confining pressures to produce different crack band types. In the second failure mode, gravel-induced stress concentration produces masses of initial micro-cracks for shear cracking, and gravels deflect the fracture surfaces. As a result, the fracture is characterized by crack bands that are far broader than in fine-grained rocks. The third failure mode requires high confining pressure and produces disconnected cracks around gravels without apparent crack bands. In this failure mode, the gravel rarely breaks, indicating that the formation of these fractures is related to the deformation of the matrix. The third failure mode requires lower confining pressure in glutenite with weak cement and matrix support. Generally, unlike fine-grained rocks, the failure mode of glutenite is not only controlled by confining pressure but also by the gravel. The failure of glutenite is characterized by producing cracks around gravels. These cracks are produced by different mechanisms and distributed in different manners under different confining pressures to form different fracture patterns. Therefore, understanding the rock microstructure and formation stress state is essential in guiding glutenite reservoir development.(c) 2023 The Authors. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co. Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/ 4.0/).

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