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A study of the effect of stress and fluid sensitivity on propped fracture conductivity in preserved reservoir shales

A sizable amount of literature exists analyzing the effect of confining stress on fracture conductivity in sandstones. This thesis attempts to answer similar questions with regard to shale formations. The low Young’s Moduli and Brinell hardness values characteristic of many prospective shale formations may lead to a great deal of embedment and fines production which can drastically reduce fracture conductivity. Furthermore, shales exhibit sensitivity to aqueous fluids which may cause them to be weakened in the presence of certain fracturing fluids. Previous work analyzing shale fluid sensitivity has failed to preserve the shales’ formation properties by allowing the shale to dry out.
This paper presents a study of propped fracture conductivity experiments at reservoir temperature and pressure using various North American shale reservoir cores. Exposure to the atmosphere can alter the mechanical properties of the shale by either drying or hydrating the samples, so care was taken to preserve these shales in their native state by maintaining constant water activity (relative humidity). Variations in applied closure stress and aqueous fluid exposure were analyzed and in certain cases altered the propped fracture conductivity by crushing proppant, embedding the proppant into the fracture face, and producing fines. The damage to fracture conductivity is correlated to mineralogy for the various shale samples. These findings show that a one-size-fits-all frac design will not work in every shale formation, rather a tailored approach to each shale is necessary.
In the future, the results of this work will be analyzed alongside easier to perform Brinell hardness tests, swelling tests, and other characterization techniques incorporated into the UT Shale Characterization Protocol. Correlations were developed to relate the simpler tests to the fracture conductivity experiments which yield a straight forward method to determine the role embedment and fluid sensitivity have on post treatment fracture conductivity in shales. The UT Shale characterization Protocol can then be used to optimize the design and execution of fracing treatments. / text

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UTEXAS/oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/22037
Date07 November 2013
CreatorsPedlow, John Wesley
Source SetsUniversity of Texas
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
Formatapplication/pdf

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