Numerical simulation of fluid injection-induced fault slip in heterogeneous shale formations

We study the impact of reservoir heterogeneity on fault slip in shale reservoirs subject to hydraulic stimulation. We construct a two-dimensional numerical model representing the horizontal cross-section of a faulted heterogeneous shale formation and simulate coupled hydro-mechanical processes in th...

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Published inComputers and geotechnics Vol. 134; p. 104120
Main Authors Zeng, Yijin, Lei, Qinghua, Wang, Zineng, Ding, Shidong, Liu, Kui, Huang, Xin, Huang, Zhaoqin, Wang, Xiaoguang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2021
Elsevier BV
Elsevier
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Summary:We study the impact of reservoir heterogeneity on fault slip in shale reservoirs subject to hydraulic stimulation. We construct a two-dimensional numerical model representing the horizontal cross-section of a faulted heterogeneous shale formation and simulate coupled hydro-mechanical processes in the system during and after high-pressure fluid injection. We conceptualize the natural fault as a geological composite consisting of a fault core and a damage zone that involves a set of subsidiary fractures parallel to the fault strike. We couple the solid deformation and fault displacement with the Darcy flow based on poro-elasticity principles and hydro-mechanical constitutive relations. The heterogeneous nature of the permeability field of the shale reservoir is mimicked as a random field governed by a log-normal probability density function and prescribed correlation lengths. We elucidate the linkage between fault slip and fluid flow field, permitting the capture of the spatio-temporal evolution of preferential flow channels and their consequences on fault slip and induced seismicity. We report a significant role of reservoir heterogeneity in fault reactivation when the hydraulic fracture is away from the fault but at a distance smaller than the correlation length. The results of our research have important implications for many fluid injection-related geoengineering activities.
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ISSN:0266-352X
1873-7633
1873-7633
DOI:10.1016/j.compgeo.2021.104120