4.7 Article

Multiscale tip asymptotics for a deflating hydraulic fracture with leak-off

期刊

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
卷 947, 期 -, 页码 -

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CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2022.623

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boundary layer structure; lubrication theory

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This paper discusses the construction of tip asymptotes for a hydraulic fracture in a permeable elastic medium. It describes the changing nature of the asymptotic fields during the arrest and recession phases of the fracture after fluid injection has ended. The paper shows that as the fracture deflates, the dominance of the linear elastic fracture mechanics tip asymptote shrinks, giving way to an intermediate asymptote. The front velocity affects the development of a linear asymptote at the fracture tip, with the intermediate asymptote reappearing. These universal multiscale asymptotes are crucial for determining the decaying stress intensity factor, transition from arrest to recession, and front velocity during recession using computational algorithms.
This paper deals with the construction of the tip asymptotes for a hydraulic fracture deflating in a permeable elastic medium. Specifically, the paper describes the changing nature of the asymptotic fields during the arrest and recession phases following propagation of the fracture after fluid injection has ended. It shows that as the fracture deflates in the arrest phase, the region of dominance of the linear elastic fracture mechanics tip asymptote w similar to x(1/2) of the fracture aperture w with distance x from the front shrinks to the benefit of an intermediate asymptote w similar to x(3)(/4). Hence only the velocity-independent 3/4 asymptote is left at the arrest-recession transition. Furthermore, with increasing receding velocity of the front, a linear asymptote w similar to x develops progressively at the fracture tip, with w similar to x(3/4) again becoming an intermediate asymptote. These universal multiscale asymptotes for the arrest and recession phases are key to determining, in combination with a computational algorithm that can simulate the evolution of a finite fracture, the decaying stress intensity factor during arrest, the time at which the fracture transitions from arrest to recession, and the negative front velocity during recession.

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