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  4. Arrest Mechanisms of Buoyant Hydraulic Fractures
 
conference paper

Arrest Mechanisms of Buoyant Hydraulic Fractures

Möri, Andreas  
•
Peruzzo, Carlo  
•
Lecampion, Brice  
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June 25, 2023
57th U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium
57th U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium

Hydraulic fracturing (HF) treatments can form widespread fractures. Understanding their containment at depth is critical, given the positive buoyancy contrast between the fracturing fluid and the surrounding rock, promoting upward growth. We study arrest mechanisms for established buoyant HF, restricting our investigation to fully planar fractures. We show that changes in the fracturing toughness (KIc) (E, and v remain unchanged) are inefficient in arresting buoyant HFs. A fracture size-dependent, apparent KIc can only prevent buoyant fractures from emerging but not stop their ascent. Sudden changes of KIc between layers need to be significant to arrest a buoyant HF KIc−2/KIc−1 ≥ 2 − 3. Contrary, a stress barrier efficiently arrests buoyant fractures for stress contrasts as little as Δσ ≥ 1.00 (MPa). We further demonstrate that the interaction with a high-leak-off layer is more efficient in arresting fracture ascent than an equivalent uniform leak-off value. Moderate to high leak-off arrests fractures before they become buoyant or without significant uprise. All considered arrest mechanisms can stop the propagation of a buoyant HF, implying that combining several mechanisms likely prevents buoyant HFs from reaching shallow formations or even the surface.

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Type
conference paper
DOI
10.56952/ARMA-2023-0711
Author(s)
Möri, Andreas  
Peruzzo, Carlo  
Lecampion, Brice  
Garagash, Dmitry
Date Issued

2023-06-25

Publisher

American Rock Mechanics Association (ARMA), OnePetro

Published in
57th U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium
ISBN of the book

978-0-9794975-8-2

Total of pages

10

Series title/Series vol.

U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium; 57

Start page

ARMA

End page

2023

Subjects

Hydraulic Fracture

•

Buoyant Forces

•

Newtonian Fluid

•

Heterogeneity

•

Geo-Energy

•

Geomechanics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GEL  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
57th U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium

Atlanta, Georgia, USA

June 25-28, 2023

Available on Infoscience
February 22, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/205151
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