Northwestern Events Calendar

Oct
2
2019

SPREE Seminar: Emmanuel Detournay

When: Wednesday, October 2, 2019
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM CT

Where: Technological Institute, A230, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208 map it

Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Public - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students

Contact: Tierney Acott   (847) 491-3257

Group: McCormick - Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE)

Category: Lectures & Meetings

Description:

Fracture Propagation Induced by Water Injection in Poorly Consolidated Rocks 

Abstract

Fracture propagation induced during water flooding operations of weak, poorly consolidated oil reservoirs is not well understood. Indeed, the theoretical framework developed for conventional hydraulic fractures breaks down, as the treatment efficiency is virtually zero and pore pressure perturbations in the reservoir occur over a length scale that is large compared to the fracture length. The talk focuses on understanding the unusually high “breakdown" pressure observed during water flooding operations in poorly consolidated and highly permeable reservoirs, within the framework of a plane strain, KGD-type, hydraulic fracture model. In contrast to classical models of hydraulic fractures, this study tracks the propagation of the fracture from its initiation at the borehole and takes into account the partitioning of the injected fluid between the borehole and the fracture as well as the large scale perturbation of the pore pressure caused by injection. The model consists of a set of equations encompassing linear elastic fracture mechanics, porous media flow, and lubrication theory. Three asymptotic solutions for the different time regimes are found theoretically, and numerical results are obtained from the discretized governing equations. These results show that the borehole pressure continues to increase after fracture initiation to eventually drop off. According to this model, the peak pressure does not correspond to a breakdown of the formation, but rather to a transition between two regimes of porous media flow. 

 

Bio

Emmanuel Detournay joined the Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geo- Engineering of the University of Minnesota in 1993, where he is now the Theodore W Bennett Chair Professor in Mining Engineering and Rock Mechanics. Prior to his faculty position, he was a Senior Research Scientist at Schlumberger Cambridge Research in England. He holds a mining engineering degree from the University of Liège, Belgium and MSc and PhD degrees in Geoengineering from the University of Minnesota. His expertise is in petroleum geomechanics, with two current research focuses: drilling mechanics (bit/rock interaction, self-excited drilling vibrations, drillstring/borehole interaction, and directional drilling) and mechanics of fluid-driven fractures (asymptotic analysis, scaling, numerical modeling). He has co-authored about 100 papers in refereed publications and also about 100 conference papers. He also been awarded 6 US patents and has received several scientific awards for his work. In 2016 he was elected into the US National Academy of Engineering (Foreign Member).

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