Abstract

Abstract. In 2018 and 2019, we performed STIMulation tests with characterising periodic pumping tests and high-resolution seismic monitoring for improving prognosis models and real-time monitoring TEChnologies for the creation of hydraulic conduits in crystalline rocks (STIMTEC). The STIMTEC underground research laboratory is located at 130 m depth in the Reiche Zeche mine in Freiberg, Germany. The experiment was designed to investigate the rock damage resulting from hydraulic stimulation and to link seismic activity and enhancement of hydraulic properties in strongly foliated metamorphic gneiss. We present results from active and passive seismic monitoring prior to and during hydraulic stimulations. We characterise the structural anisotropy and heterogeneity of the reservoir rocks at the STIMTEC site and the induced high-frequency (>1 kHz) acoustic emission (AE) activity, associated with brittle deformation at the centimetre-to-decimetre scale. We derived the best velocity model per recording station from over 300 active ultrasonic transmission measurements for high-accuracy AE event location. The average P-wave anisotropy is 12 %, in agreement with values derived from laboratory tests on core material. We use a 16-station seismic monitoring network comprising AE sensors, accelerometers, one broadband sensor and one AE hydrophone. All instrumentation was removable, providing us with the flexibility to use existing boreholes for multiple purposes. This approach also allowed for optimising the (near)-real-time passive monitoring system during the experiment. To locate AE events, we tested the effect of different velocity models and inferred their location accuracy. Based on the known active ultrasonic transmission measurement points, we obtained an average relocation error of 0.26±0.06 m where the AE events occurred using a transverse isotropic velocity model per station. The uncertainty resulting from using a simplified velocity model increased to 0.5–2.6 m, depending on whether anisotropy was considered or not. Structural heterogeneity overprints anisotropy of the host rock and has a significant influence on velocity and attenuation, with up to 4 % and up to 50 % decrease on velocity and wave amplitude, respectively. Significant variations in seismic responses to stimulation were observed ranging from abundant AE events (several thousand per stimulated interval) to no activity with breakdown pressure values ranging between 6.4 and 15.6 MPa. Low-frequency seismic signals with varying amplitudes were observed for all stimulated intervals that are more correlated with the injection flow rate rather than the pressure curve. We discuss the observations from STIMTEC in context of similar experiments performed in underground research facilities to highlight the effect of small-scale rock, stress and structural heterogeneity and/or anisotropy observed at the decametre scale. The reservoir complexity at this scale supports our conclusion that field-scale experiments benefit from high-sensitivity, wide-bandwidth instrumentation and flexible monitoring approaches to adapt to unexpected challenges during all stages of the experiment.

Highlights

  • Mesoscale in situ hydraulic stimulation experiments performed in well-instrumented underground research laboratories (URLs) offer a number of advantages over small-scale laboratory tests and reservoir-scale experiments

  • ultrasonic transmission (UT) measurement points in the range 22–31 m borehole depth in the injection borehole (Fig. 4b), along which the majority of acoustic emission (AE) events were observed, compared to 2.6 ± 0.20 m for isotropic and 0.49±0.12 m for the single transverse isotropic velocity model

  • High-sensitivity AE sensors placed at some distance (20–30 m, considering the site characteristics of the STIMTEC experiment) to the stimulated intervals combined with AE hydrophones placed close to the stimulated interval in the stimulation borehole likely offer the best solution for high-resolution seismic monitoring during hydraulic stimulation in URLs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Mesoscale in situ hydraulic stimulation experiments performed in well-instrumented underground research laboratories (URLs) offer a number of advantages over small-scale laboratory tests and reservoir-scale experiments. Intermediate-scale in situ experiments, conducted in URLs, allow for a close to optimal placement of seismic sensor networks for monitoring and characterisation of the target volume (Ohtsu, 1991; Zang et al, 2017; Amann et al, 2018; Kwiatek et al, 2018; De Barros et al, 2019; Feng et al, 2019). Slow deformation processes have been monitored with tilt sensors during the “In-situ Stimulation and Circulation Experiment” performed at Grimsel Test Site (GTS) in Switzerland This experiment was conducted at a depth of 480 m below surface, within an experimental volume of approximately 20 m × 20 m × 20 m of granitic rock between February and May 2017 (Gischig et al, 2018). Fracture dimensions, orientations, faulting style and the orientation of the prevailing principal stress axes may be inferred from the analysis of induced seismic events (Manthei et al, 2001; van der Baan et al, 2013; Manthei and Plenkers, 2018; Krietsch et al, 2019)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call