Abstract

As a waterless fracturing fluids for gas shale stimulation with low viscosity and strong diffusibility, supercritical CO2 is promising than the water by avoiding the clay hydration expansion and reducing reservoir damage. The permeability evolution influenced by the changes of the temperature and stress is the key to gas extraction in deep buried shale reservoirs. Thus, the study focuses on the coupling influence of effective stress, temperature, and CO2 adsorption expansion effects on the seepage characteristics of Silurian Longmaxi shale fractured by supercritical CO2. The results show that when the gas pressure is 1–3 MPa, the permeability decreases significantly with the increase in gas pressure, and the Klinkenberg effects plays a predominant role at this stage. When the gas pressure is 3–5 MPa, the permeability increases with the increase in gas pressure, and the influence of effective stress on permeability is dominant. The permeability decreases exponentially with the increase in effective stress. The permeability of shale after the adsorption of CO2 gas is significantly lower than that of before adsorption; the permeability decreases with the increase in temperature at 305.15 K–321.15 K, and with the increase in temperature, the permeability sensitivity to the temperature decreases. The permeability is closely related to supercritical CO2 injection pressure and volume stress; when the injection pressure of supercritical CO2 is constant, the permeability decreases with the increase in volume stress. The results can be used for the dynamic prediction of reservoir permeability and gas extraction in CO2-enhanced shale gas development.

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