Abstract

Fault zones are key features in crystalline geothermal reservoirs or in other subsurface environments due to the fact that they act as main fluid pathways. An adequate experimental description of the evolution of permeability of a realistic microscopic fault zone under in-situ reservoir and fracture parallel flow conditions is required. To address this topic, we demonstrate a novel experimental set up (Punch-Through Shear test) that is able to generate a realistic shear zone (microfault) under in-situ reservoir conditions while simultaneously measuring permeability and dilation. Three samples of intact granite from the Odenwald (Upper Rhine Graben) were placed into a MTS 815 tri-axial compression cell, where a self-designed piston assembly punched down the inner cylinder of the sample creating the desired microfault geometry with a given offset. Permeability was measured and fracture dilation was inferred from an LVDT extensometer chain, as well as the balance of fluid volume flowing in and out of the sample. After fracture generation, the shear displacement was increased to 1.2 mm and pore pressure changes of ± 5 or ± 10 MPa were applied cyclically to simulate injection and production scenarios. Formation of a microfault increased the permeability of the granite rock by 2 to almost 3 orders of magnitude. Further shear displacement led to a small increase in permeability by a factor of 1.1 to 4.0, but permeability was reduced by a factor of 2.5 to 4 within 16 h due to compaction and fault healing. Effective pressure cycling led to reversible permeability changes. CT images showed that the fracture network is rather complex, but depicts all features commonly observed in larger scale fault zones.

Highlights

  • The permeability of fractures and faults, or, more generally, shear fractures in crustal rocks has been a substantial research topic in the past

  • The term shear fracture is often applied to such geometries, they do not represent the complex structure of a single shear or fault zone

  • Shear fracture geometries generated in conventional fracture permeability experiments sometimes do not represent the complex ge­ ometry of single fault zone on a laboratory scale

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Summary

Introduction

The permeability of fractures and faults, or, more generally, shear fractures in crustal rocks has been a substantial research topic in the past. It is important in crustal faulting processes or earthquake mechanisms, but is key in understanding the fluid flow in faulted or enhanced geothermal systems,[1,2,3,4] as well as the stability of underground constructions, such as tunnels or nuclear waste repositories. Watanabe et al.[11] used a shear-box tool to apply mode II loading to an intact rock sample, but pointed out that it is difficult to generate a single shear fracture from shear-box experiments due to the occurrence of multiple fractures. Experiments by Frash et al.[12]

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