Abstract

Hydraulic fracturing is an indispensable technology for the development of shale oil and shale gas. Knowing the changes in the rock mechanical properties and failure modes during hydraulic fracturing is the key to improving the efficiency of hydraulic fracturing. Based on experiments and simulations, it can be concluded that the injection of fracturing fluid in the hydraulic fracturing caused deformation of the fracture surface, and the rock mechanical properties experienced degradation with a maximum reduction in the rock mechanical properties of 44.24%. As indicated in the experiments, the displacement of the measurement point was decreased with the distance increase between the injection point and the measurement point. According to the numerical simulations, tensile failure is the main failure mode in hydraulic fracturing, but the percentage of shear failure had an obvious increase with the increase in distance between the injection point and the measurement point. Comparing DDS #1 and DDS #5, the DDS #5 measurement point was farther away from the injection point, and the average percentage of shear failure increased from 21.94 to 52.72%. Meanwhile, the increase in the branch fractures also caused shear failure to occur. Comparing Sample 1 and Sample 3, in Sample 3, which had more branch fractures, the average percentage of shear failure increased from 33.12 to 37.58%. Due to the porous medium of the reservoir rock, the enormous pressure generated during the injection of fracturing fluid caused significant deformation of the fracture surface, leading to the tensile failure of the rock. The displacement of the fracture surface caused by the fracturing fluid injection also led to the deformation of the pore throat structure; thus, the shear failure increased when the measurement point was away from the injection point.

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