Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8125478 Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 2018 32 Pages PDF
Abstract
Based on fracture mechanics, we analyzed how large a portion of the fracture may be left unsupported before it is severely pinched during drawdown. A parametric study was performed on the displacement of the yield-stress slurry by the overflushing fluid. Qualitatively, when fingers of the overflushing fluid can be created at the overflush/slurry interface, large slurry pillars are preserved in the near-wellbore area, which may keep the fracture open. Three main scenarios of fluids distribution are identified and classified in terms of the oveflush fluid-to-slurry viscosity ratio ξ: (i) the slumping-dominated regime, where light clean overflush fluid goes on top of sedimenting heavy proppant-laden suspension (ξ≳0.1), (ii) an intermediate scenario of slumping combined with fingering (ξ∼0.01), and, finally, (iii) a pure fingering-dominated scenario, when the slurry viscosity is high (ξ<10−3). The third scenario minimizes the geomechanical risks of overflushing by providing tiny fingers that are unlikely to be pinched out during fracture closure.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Economic Geology
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