Abstract

AbstractIn the last decades, the study of fluid flow through discontinuities such as fractures has received significant attention from the petroleum industry owing to the discovery of naturally fractured reservoirs. Predicting the behavior of this type of reservoir is challenging and includes, as a crucial step, determining its geomechanical parameters. Several in situ tests and empirical relationships have been established to estimate these parameters. Nevertheless, these procedures have important limitations. This work proposes an artificial intelligence‐based methodology to identify geomechanical parameters from borehole injection pressure curves obtained during hydraulic fracturing tests. This methodology applies a genetic algorithm to minimize the sum of squared differences between the observed and predicted borehole pressure curves. Furthermore, an artificial neural network is adopted to build a proxy model that substitutes hydraulic fracturing numerical simulations, substantially reducing computational time. A proper recursive strategy is adopted to predict the borehole pressure curves. Additionally, a hyperparameter tuning technique selects appropriate neural network hyperparameters based on the multistep‐ahead prediction error. Finally, the framework is applied in a KGD problem that models hydraulic fracture propagation. The benchmark confirms the capability of the proposed methodology to identify geomechanical parameters from fracturing tests.

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