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Space-time interlaced tomography for particle tracking

AIAA Scitech 2019 Forum

Halls, Benjamin R.; Quintana, Enrico C.; Lebow, Lucas K.; Guildenbecher, Daniel R.

Trajectories of unique particles were tracked using spatially and temporally interlaced single-shot images from multiple views. Synthetic data were investigated to verify the ability of the technique to track particles in three-dimensions and time. The synthetic data was composed of four images from unique perspectives at four instances in time. The analysis presented verifies that under certain circumstances particle trajectories can be mapped in three dimensions from a minimal amount of information, i.e. one image per viewing angle. These results can enable four-dimensional measurements where they may otherwise prove unfeasible.

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Simulations of the effects of proppant placement on the conductivity and mechanical stability of hydraulic fractures

International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences

Bolintineanu, Dan S.; Rao, Rekha R.; Lechman, Jeremy B.; Romero, Joseph A.; Jove Colon, Carlos F.; Quintana, Enrico C.; Bauer, Stephen J.; Ingraham, Mathew D.

We generate a wide range of models of proppant-packed fractures using discrete element simulations, and measure fracture conductivity using finite element flow simulations. This allows for a controlled computational study of proppant structure and its relationship to fracture conductivity and stress in the proppant pack. For homogeneous multi-layered packings, we observe the expected increase in fracture conductivity with increasing fracture aperture, while the stress on the proppant pack remains nearly constant. This is consistent with the expected behavior in conventional proppant-packed fractures, but the present work offers a novel quantitative analysis with an explicit geometric representation of the proppant particles. In single-layered packings (i.e. proppant monolayers), there is a drastic increase in fracture conductivity as the proppant volume fraction decreases and open flow channels form. However, this also corresponds to a sharp increase in the mechanical stress on the proppant pack, as measured by the maximum normal stress relative to the side crushing strength of typical proppant particles. We also generate a variety of computational geometries that resemble highly heterogeneous proppant packings hypothesized to form during channel fracturing. In some cases, these heterogeneous packings show drastic improvements in conductivity with only moderate increase in the stress on the proppant particles, suggesting that in certain applications these structures are indeed optimal. We also compare our computer-generated structures to micro computed tomography imaging of a manually fractured laboratory-scale shale specimen, and find reasonable agreement in the geometric characteristics.

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Final Report for LDRD: The Effect of Proppant Placement on Closure of Fractured Shale Gas Wells

Ingraham, Mathew D.; Bolintineanu, Dan S.; Rao, Rekha R.; Mondy, L.A.; Lechman, Jeremy B.; Quintana, Enrico C.; Bauer, Stephen J.

The recent boom in the oil and natural gas industry of hydraulic fracture of source rocks has caused a new era in oil and gas production worldwide. However, there are many parts of this process that are poorly understood and thus hard to control. One of the few things that can be controlled is the process of injection to create the fractures in the subsurface and the subsequent injection of proppants to maintain the permeability of the fractured formation, allowing hydrocarbons to be extracted. The goal of this work was to better understand the injection process and resulting proppant distribution in the fracture through a combination of lab-scale experiments and computational models.

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Laboratory scale hydraulic fracture of marcellus shale

50th US Rock Mechanics / Geomechanics Symposium 2016

Ingraham, Mathew D.; Bolintineanu, Dan S.; Rao, Rekha R.; Bauer, Stephen J.; Quintana, Enrico C.; Lechman, Jeremy B.

Performing experiments in the laboratory that mimic conditions in the field is challenging. In an attempt to understand hydraulic fracture in the field, and provide laboratory flow results for model verification, an effort to duplicate the typical fracture pattern for long horizontal wells has been made. The typical "disks on a string" fracture formation is caused by properly orienting the long horizontal well such that it is parallel to the minimum principal stress direction, then fracturing the rock. In order to replicate this feature in the laboratory with a traditional cylindrical specimen the test must be performed under extensile stress conditions and the specimen must have been cored parallel to bedding in order to avoid failure along a bedding plane, and replicate bedding orientation in the field. Testing has shown that it is possible to form failure features of this type in the laboratory. A novel method for jacketing is employed to allow fluid to flow out of the fracture and leave the specimen without risking the integrity of the jacket; this allows proppant to be injected into the fracture, simulating loss of fracturing fluids to the formation, and allowing a solid proppant pack to be developed.

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Results 26–50 of 75
Results 26–50 of 75