Abstract

In this paper, the high-temperature/high-pressure triaxial testing system of rocks is used to study the effect of spontaneous fluid imbibition on the formation mechanism of fracture networks, by means of acoustic emission (AE) monitoring and ultrasound measurement. After the water–shale interaction, the rock mechanical parameters such as rock strength, elastic modulus, cohesion, and internal friction angle of shales significantly decrease as the imbibition time increases, indicating that the fluid has a strong influence on the mechanical properties of brittle shales. The stress–strain curves of the wet and dry shales and their AE characteristics are quite different: (i) the stress–strain curve of wet shale samples shows multiple fluctuations before macroscopic failure, and its cumulative AE number curve presents a step-like jump many times that corresponds to the local microcracking; (ii) the stress–strain curve of dry shale samples mainly shows the characteristic of linear elastic deformation during early loading, which has less AE event number, and the step-like jump is not observed in all the AE curves. The dry shale only has a large number of AE events until it is close to macroscopic failure. Nuclear magnetic resonance, mineral composition, and microstructure analysis show that Chengkou shale generally develops micro–nanoscale pores with a small pore throat, and thus strong capillary spontaneous absorption occurs. The shale–water interaction includes both chemical and physical effects, which affect the key parameters such as acoustic velocity, frictional force on the surfaces of artificial fracture, fracability, and other mechanical properties. This paper provides new insights to the investigation on the formation mechanism of artificial fracture networks in brittle shales.

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