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  4. Experiments versus theory for the initiation and propagation of radial hydraulic fractures in low permeability materials
 
research article

Experiments versus theory for the initiation and propagation of radial hydraulic fractures in low permeability materials

Lecampion, Brice  
•
Desroches, Jean
•
Jeffrey, Robert G.
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2017
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

We compare numerical predictions of the initiation and propagation of radial fluid-driven fractures with laboratory experiments performed in different low permeability materials (PMMA, cement). In particular, we choose experiments where the time evolution of several quantities (fracture width, radius, wellbore pressure) were accurately measured and for which the material and injection parameters were known precisely. Via a dimensional analysis, we discuss in detail the different physical phenomena governing the initiation and early stage of growth of radial hydraulic fractures from a notched wellbore. The scaling analysis notably clarifies the occurence of different regimes of propagation depending on the injection rate, system compliance, material parameters, wellbore and initial notch sizes. In particular, the comparisons presented here provide a clear evidence of the difference between the wellbore pressure at which a fracture initiates and the maximum pressure recorded during a test (also known as the breakdown pressure). The scaling analysis identifies the dimensionless numbers governing the strong fluid-solid effects at the early stage of growth, which are responsible for the continuous increase of the wellbore pressure after the initiation of the fracture. Our analysis provides a simple way to quantify these early time effects for any given laboratory or field configuration. The good agreement between theoretical predictions and experiments also validates the current state of the art hydraulic fracture mechanics models, at least for the simple fracture geometry investigated here.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/2016JB013183
Web of Science ID

WOS:000396132200025

Author(s)
Lecampion, Brice  
Desroches, Jean
Jeffrey, Robert G.
Bunger, Andrew P.
Date Issued

2017

Published in
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume

122

Issue

2

Start page

1239

End page

1263

Subjects

Geomechanics

•

Fracture and flow

•

Fractures and faults

•

Mechanics

•

theory

•

and modeling

•

hydraulic fracturing

•

initiation

•

experiments

•

theory

Note

Manuscript Accepted: 22 December 2016 Accepted manuscript online: 26 December 2016

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GEL  
Available on Infoscience
January 17, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/132954
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