Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1754979 Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The experimental study showed up to 88% reduction in fracture conductivity after water flow under 4000 psi closure stress. The conductivity loss was due to severe proppant embedment as the shale fracture face was softened after its exposure to water. Direct measurement of embedment depths indicated that for fractures that were exposed to water, the average embedment depth was about 50% of the proppant median diameter, while for fractures that were only exposed to gas, the average embedment depth was just 15% of the proppant median diameter. It was also observed that pore space of the sand grains at the outlet of the fracture was clogged by shale flakes and fragments. The computational fluid dynamics study proved that even a 10% proppant grain volume embedment can cause 45-80% conductivity loss. With the same proppant volume loss due to embedment, the conductivity reduction was less in fractures containing multiple proppant layers than the fracture containing only one layer of proppants.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Economic Geology
Authors
, , , ,