Publication | Open Access
Hydraulic fracturing and permeability enhancement in granite from subcritical/brittle to supercritical/ductile conditions
100
Citations
30
References
2017
Year
Rock TestingEngineeringMechanical EngineeringWell StimulationWater-rock InteractionEarth ScienceGeotechnical EngineeringIntensive FracturingFluid PropertiesHydraulic FracturingGeologyFractured Reservoir EngineeringFormation DamageRock PropertiesCivil EngineeringPermeability EnhancementGeomechanicsRock PhysicFracturing CharacteristicsReservoir GeologyRock Mechanics
Abstract Hydraulic fracturing experiments were conducted at 200–450°C by injecting water into cylindrical granite samples containing a borehole at an initial effective confining pressure of 40 MPa. Intensive fracturing was observed at all temperatures, but the fracturing characteristics varied with temperature, perhaps due to differences in the water viscosity. At the lowest considered temperature (200°C), fewer fractures propagated linearly from the borehole, and the breakdown pressure was twice the confining pressure. However, these characteristics disappeared with increasing temperature; the fracture pattern shifted toward the formation of a greater number of shorter fractures over the entire body of the sample, and the breakdown pressure decreased greatly. Hydraulic fracturing significantly increased the permeability at all temperatures, and this permeability enhancement was likely to form a productive geothermal reservoir even at the highest considered temperature, which exceeded both the brittle‐ductile transition temperature of granite and the critical temperature of water.
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