Abstract

Proppant placement in hydraulic fractures is crucial for avoiding fracture closure and maintaining a high conductivity pathway for oil and gas flow from the reservoir. The curving fracture is the primary fracture form in formation and affects proppant–fluid flow. This work experimentally examines proppant transport and placement in narrow curving channels. Four dimensionless numbers, including the bending angle, distance ratio, Reynolds number, and Shields number, are used to analyze particle placement in curving fractures. The results indicate that non-uniform proppant placement occurs in curving fractures due to the flow direction change and induces an irregular proppant dune. The dune height and covered area are lower than that in the straight fracture. The curving pathway hinders proppant distribution and leads to a dune closer to the inlet. When the distance increases between the inlet and curving section, a large depleted zone in the curving section will be formed and hinder oil and gas flowback. The covered area has negative linear correlations with the Reynolds number and Shields numbers. Four dimensionless parameters are used to develop a model to quantitatively predict the covered area of particle dune in curving fractures.

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