4.5 Article

A Numerical Study on the Propagation Mechanisms of Hydraulic Fractures in Fracture-Cavity Carbonate Reservoirs

Journal

CMES-COMPUTER MODELING IN ENGINEERING & SCIENCES
Volume 127, Issue 2, Pages 575-598

Publisher

TECH SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.32604/cmes.2021.015384

Keywords

Hydraulic fracturing; fracture-cavity reservoir; crack propagation; XFEM

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51904111]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20170457]
  3. Open Fund for Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Advanced Manufacturing Technology [HGAMTL-1712]
  4. Natural Science Research of Institution of Higher Education of Jiangsu Province [17KJA460003]

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The study investigates the behavior and propagation mechanisms of hydraulic fractures in fracture-cavity reservoirs, finding that factors such as lateral stress coefficient, confining stress, in-situ stress difference, fluid viscosity, and fluid pumping rate all play a role in shaping the fracture path. Frictional natural fractures connected to cavities significantly alter stress distribution, causing hydraulic fractures to deviate from their original direction. Natural cavities between adjacent fracturing stages have a significant impact on stress distribution, leading to irregular fracture propagation paths.
Field data suggests that carbonate reservoirs contain abundant natural fractures and cavities. The propagation mechanisms of hydraulic fractures in fracture-cavity reservoirs are different from conventional reservoirs on account of the stress concentration surrounding cavities. In this paper, we develop a fully coupled numerical model using the extended finite element method (XFEM) to investigate the behaviors and propagation mechanisms of hydraulic fractures in fracture-cavity reservoirs. Simulation results show that a higher lateral stress coefficient can enhance the influence of the natural cavity, causing a more curved fracture path. However, lower confining stress or smaller in-situ stress difference can reduce this influence, and thus contributes to the penetration of the hydraulic fracture towards the cavity. Higher fluid viscosity and high fluid pumping rate are both able to attenuate the effect of the cavity. The frictional natural fracture connected to the cavity can significantly change the stress distribution around the cavity, thus dramatically deviates the hydraulic fracture from its original propagation direction. It is also found that the natural cavity existing between two adjacent fracturing stages will significantly influence the stress distribution between fractures and is more likely to result in irregular propagation paths compared to the case without a cavity.

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