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Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Non peer reviewed)

The effect of gravity on the shape and direction of vertical hydraulic fractures

Saeed Salimzadeh
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Research Way, Clayton, Vic. 3168, Australia. Email: saeed.salimzadeh@csiro.au

The APPEA Journal 60(2) 668-671 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ19028
Accepted: 17 February 2020   Published: 15 May 2020

Abstract

Australia has great potential for shale gas development that can reshape the future of energy in the country. Hydraulic fracturing has been proven as an efficient method to improve recovery from unconventional gas reservoirs. Shale gas hydraulic fracturing is a very complex, multi-physics process, and numerical modelling to design and predict the growth of hydraulic fractures is gaining a lot of interest around the world. The initiation and propagation direction of hydraulic fractures are controlled by in-situ rock stresses, local natural fractures and larger faults. In the propagation of vertical hydraulic fractures, the fracture footprint may extend tens to hundreds of metres, over which the in-situ stresses vary due to gravity and the weight of the rock layers. Proppants, which are added to the hydraulic fracturing fluid to retain the fracture opening after depressurisation, add additional complexity to the propagation mechanics. Proppant distribution can affect the hydraulic fracture propagation by altering the hydraulic fracture fluid viscosity and by blocking the hydraulic fracture fluid flow. In this study, the effect of gravitational forces on proppant distribution and fracture footprint in vertically oriented hydraulic fractures are investigated using a robust finite element code and the results are discussed.

Keywords: multiple layers, numerical simulation, shale gas and oil.

Dr Saeed Salimzadeh obtained his PhD in Geomechanics in 2014 from the University of New South Wales (UNSW), Sydney, Australia. He has been a researcher at the Imperial College London, Technical University of Denmark and UNSW. He has been investigating the geomechanical effects and fracture deformation and propagation during subsurface activities in carbon sequestration, reservoir development and production as well as in enhanced geothermal systems. As a Research Scientist at CSIRO Australia, his research focuses on optimising hydraulic fractures for mine preconditioning, in-situ recovery and geothermal systems.


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