Abstract

Natural fractures in tight sandstone formation play a significant role in fracture network generation during hydraulic fracturing. This work presents an experimental model of tight sandstone with closed cemented preexisting fractures. The influence of closed cemented fractures’ (CCF) directions on the propagation behavior of hydraulic fracture (HF) is studied based on the hydraulic fracturing experiment. A field-scaled numerical model used to simulate the propagation of HF is established based on the flow-stress-damage (FSD) coupled method. This model contains the discrete fracture network (DFN) generated by the Monte-Carlo method and is used to investigate the effects of CCFs’ distribution, CCFs’ strength, and in-situ stress anisotropy, injection rate, and fluid viscosity on the propagation behavior of fracture network. The results show that the distribution direction of CCFs is critical for the formation of complex HFs. When the angle between the horizontal maximum principal stress direction and the CCFs is in the range of 30° to 60°, the HF network is the most complex. There are many kinds of compound fracture propagation patterns, such as crossing, branching, and deflection. The increase of CCFs’ strength is not conducive to the generation of branched and deflected fractures. When the in-situ stress difference ranges from 3 MPa to 6 MPa, the HF network’s complexity and propagation range can be guaranteed simultaneously. The increase in the injection rate will promote the formation of the complex HF network. The proper increase of fracturing fluid viscosity can promote HF’s propagation. However, when the viscosity is too high, the complex HFs only appear around the wellbore. The research results can provide new insights for the hydraulic fracturing optimization design of naturally fractured tight sandstone formation.

Highlights

  • Hydraulic fracturing is the key technology to improve the oil and gas development of the unconventional reservoir

  • This paper focuses on the influence of closed cemented fractures’ (CCF) on hydraulic fracture (HF)’ propagation, so the influence of fracture opening is not considered

  • Based on exploring the influence of fracture network direction on hydraulic fracture propagation through hydraulic fracturing experiments, a field-scaled hydraulic fracturing numerical model of naturally fractured tight sandstone formation is established by combining FSD coupling model and MonteCarlo simulation method

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Summary

Introduction

Hydraulic fracturing is the key technology to improve the oil and gas development of the unconventional reservoir. Wang et al [46] used the FSD model to study the influence of the injection rate on the propagation behavior of HF in the formation containing a discrete fracture network (DFN). Li et al [48] used this method to simulate the multistage hydraulic fracturing process and studied the influence of fracture spacing and stress anisotropy on the propagation and reorientation of three HFs. To explore the HF propagation behavior in tight sandstone formation containing multiple groups of CCFs, a new laboratory-scale fracturing experimental model is designed in this paper. A large-scale numerical model used to simulate the hydraulic fracturing process in naturally fractured tight sandstone formation is established by the coupled FSD method. The effects of CCFs’ distribution, CCFs’ strength, in-situ stress anisotropy, injection rate, and fluid viscosity on the propagation behavior of the HF network are investigated

Hydraulic Fracturing Experiment of Fractured Tight Sandstone Formation
Analysis of Experimental Results
25 HF deflected
Field-Scale Hydraulic Fracturing Numerical Simulation
Analysis of Numerical Simulation Results
10 Normal distribution
Findings
Conclusions
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