Abstract

Abstract A new transient analytical model has been developed to study the temperature and stress distribution induced by a non-isothermal fluid injection, particularly conventional waterflooding. In the model, the transient pressure, temperature and stress fields are computed consecutively. The pressure field has been computed by using the exponential integral solution. The transient temperature field has been computed by using a model that can account for both the overburden heat losses and transversal heat dispersion within the reservoir. The stress distribution has been calculated by a method presented for a plane strain in a hollow cylinder The results implied that the thermoelastic changes in the cooled zone could affect the surrounding stress fields in a profound manner. For instance for a porous medium with stiff material such as carbonate reservoirs owing to cooling by the injected cold water large scale tensile stresses arise and may induce new fractures or propagates existing ones far into the reservoir. In addition, a major tangential stress concentration develops just in front of the cooled zone and hence shear yield is highly likely to occur ahead of the thermal front. The two dimensional treatment of the temperature field makes the new method superior to the previous analytical models where only one dimensional field has been employed.

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