Abstract

The ground surface deformation (GSD) caused by oil shale in-situ mining poses a threat to land resources and human's lives and property. This study, for the first time, conducts a full stratum simulation of the Fuyu oil shale in-situ pyrolysis pilot base, analyzing the evolution characteristics of the temperature field, stress field, and deformation field of the entire stratum profile during the heating and cooling processes of convective heating mining. Considering the changes in the pore structure, thermophysical, and mechanical properties of the stratum, the environmental geological effects of rock deformation during in-situ mining were identified. Simulation results show that after heating, the temperature within 80 cm of the heating well reaches above the initial pyrolysis temperature of 350 °C for oil shale organic matter, and there is a significant stress concentration near the heat source. In the simulation, ground displacement rises in a wave-like manner during heating, quickly subsides after cooling, and finally stabilizes. Eventually, the entire stratum exhibited subsidence, with a subsidence amount of 0.59 cm. The spatiotemporal deformation trend obtained from SBAS-InSAR real-time monitoring results is similar to the simulation results. By comparing the monitoring results with the simulation results, the synergistic deformation mechanism of underground and ground surface co-deformation during in-situ mining of geochemical reactions in the study area was analyzed. The deformation rate is determined by the thermal hysteresis phenomenon and the temperature difference between the heated fluid and the rock layer. This provides scientific support for the geological effect evaluation of oil shale in-situ mining, which helps to improve mining safety and efficiency.

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