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Laboratory True Triaxial Hydraulic Fracturing of Granite Under Six Fluid Injection Schemes and Grain-Scale Fracture Observations

Cited 46 time in Web of Science Cited 50 time in Scopus
Authors

Zhuang, Li; Jung, Sung Gyu; Diaz, Melvin; Kim, Kwang Yeom; Hofmann, Hannes; Min, Ki-Bok; Zang, Arno; Stephansson, Ove; Zimmermann, Guenter; Yoon, Jeoung-Seok

Issue Date
2020-10
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Citation
Rock Mechanics and Rock Engineering, Vol.53 No.10, pp.4329-4344
Abstract
Laboratory hydraulic fracturing tests on cubic granite specimens with a side length of 100 mm were performed under true triaxial stress conditions combined with acoustic emission monitoring. Six different injection schemes were applied to investigate the influence of the injection scheme on hydraulic performance and induced seismicity during hydraulic fracturing. Three of these schemes are injection rate controlled: constant rate continuous injection (CCI), stepwise rate continuous injection (SCI), and cyclic progressive injection (CPI); the other three are pressurization rate controlled: stepwise pressurization (SP), stepwise pulse pressurization (SPP) and cyclic pulse pressurization (CPP). The test results show that the SPP scheme achieves the highest increase in injectivity among the six schemes. The CPI scheme generates the lowest induced seismicity while the improvement in injectivity is the least pronounced. The CPP scheme allows increasing injectivity and decreasing induced seismicity, and is suggested as a promising alternative injection scheme for field applications. Thin section microscopic observations of fractured specimens show that intragranular fractures splitting microcline, orthoclase and quartz grains dominate the hydraulic fractures independent of the injection scheme. The SPP scheme creates the largest fracture length, which explains the highest injectivity value among all schemes. Tests with relatively low magnitude of maximum AE amplitude correspond to short fracture length and small portions of intragranular fractures in microcline grains. Quartz grains are more fractured than microcline and orthoclase grains, and quartz chips (natural proppants) are frequently observed adjacent to hydraulic fractures. The laboratory test results show the potential for hydraulic fracture growth control in field applications by advanced fluid injection schemes, i.e. cyclic pulse pressurization of granitic rock mass.
ISSN
0723-2632
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/190961
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00603-020-02170-8
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