Abstract

To study the effects of deep rock drilling pressure relief under high stress conditions in enhanced geothermal systems, two kinds of drilling pressure relief experiments were conducted on sandstone—the staged drilling of pressure relief holes before peak stress and one-time drilling. Pressure relief experiments were carried out on sandstone with two borehole methods of the stage-by-stage drilling and one-time drilling of pressure relief boreholes ahead of the experiments. FLAC3D was used to analyze the plastic zone evolution during drilling and the relationship between stress and plastic zone volume. The results reveal the pre-peak stress change characteristics and pressure relief features of non-prefabricated boreholes under high stress. The experiments show that the staged drilling of pressurized samples involves stages of rapid and gradual decreases in stress, with total relief amplitudes increasing but single-borehole relief decreasing with more holes. Under the same conditions, staged drilling has better relief effects and results in greater energy dissipation, indicating that incremental pre-peak pressure relief is beneficial for reducing the surrounding rock’s impact tendency and improving stability. The research results can provide good guidance and reference for the long-term stability analysis of borehole-containing rock and rock burst hazard control.

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