Abstract

Summary Hydraulic fracturing treatments that use treated water and very low proppant concentrations (commonly referred to as water-fracturing treatments or "waterfracs") have been successful in stimulating low-permeability reservoirs. However, the mechanism by which these treatments provide sufficient conductivity is not well understood. To understand the effects of fracture properties on conductivity, a series of laboratory conductivity experiments was performed with fractured cores from the east Texas Cotton Valley sandstone formation. The results of this study demonstrate that fracture displacement is required for surface asperities to provide residual fracture width and sufficient conductivity in the absence of proppants. However, the conductivity may vary by at least two orders of magnitude, depending on formation properties such as the degree of fracture displacement, the size and distribution of asperities, and rock mechanical properties. In the presence of proppants, the conductivity can be proppant- or asperity-dominated, depending on the proppant concentration, proppant strength, and formation properties. Under asperity-dominated conditions, the conductivity varies significantly and is difficult to predict. Low concentrations of high-strength proppant overcome the uncertainty associated with formation properties and provide proppant-dominated conductivity. The implication of these results is that the success of a water-fracturing treatment is difficult to predict because it will depend significantly on formation properties. This dependence can be overcome by using high-strength proppants or proppants at conventional field concentrations.

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