SPE Journal
Volume 17,
Number 1,
March 2012,
pp. 292-306
Summary
Placing multiple hydraulic fractures at intervals along horizontal wells has
proved to be a highly effective method for stimulation. However, the mechanical
interaction between a growing hydraulic fracture and one or more previous
hydraulic fractures can affect the fracture geometry such that the final
fracture array is suboptimal for stimulation. If the fracture-array geometry is
idealized as a set of regular and planar fractures, history matching and
production forecasting may be inaccurate. During the treatments, the fractures
can curve toward or away from one another, potentially intersecting one
another. A detailed parametric study of this phenomenon using a coupled 2D
numerical fracturing simulator shows that the curving is associated with a
combination of opening and sliding along the previously placed hydraulic
fracture, as well as the previous fracture's disturbance of the local stress
field because of its propped width. Dimensional analysis and scaling techniques
are used to identify the key parameters that are associated with suppression of
each mechanism that can lead to hydraulic-fracture curving. The analysis, which
is in agreement with available data, results in a clarification of the
conditions under which attractive and repulsive curving are expected, as well
as the conditions under which curving is expected to be negligible or even
completely suppressed. This last case of planar hydraulic-fracture growth is of
practical importance and will usually be considered desirable. We present a
straightforward method for determining whether planar fracture growth is
expected that additionally gives insight into how design parameters can be
modified to promote planar hydraulic-fracture growth.
© 2012. Society of Petroleum Engineers
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History
- Original manuscript received:
11 November 2010
- Meeting paper published:
27 May 2009
- Revised manuscript received:
21 March 2011
- Manuscript approved:
4 April 2011
- Published online:
24 January 2012
- Version of record:
13 March 2012