Enhancing Understanding of Hydraulic Fracture Tip Advancement through Inversion of Low-Frequency Distributed Acoustic Sensing Data
Characterizing the fluid-driven fracture tip advancing process presents a significant challenge due to the difficulty of replicating real-world conditions in laboratory experiments and the lack of precise field measurements. However, recent advances in low-frequency distributed acoustic sensing (LF-...
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Zusammenfassung: | Characterizing the fluid-driven fracture tip advancing process presents a
significant challenge due to the difficulty of replicating real-world
conditions in laboratory experiments and the lack of precise field
measurements. However, recent advances in low-frequency distributed acoustic
sensing (LF-DAS) technology offer new opportunities to investigate the dynamics
of propagating hydraulic fractures. In this study, we propose an iterative
inversion method to characterize fracture-tip advancing behaviors using LF-DAS
data. A forward geomechanical model is developed using the three-dimensional
displacement discontinuity method, and the optimization is realized by a
conjugate gradient method. The performance of the inversion algorithm is
demonstrated using a synthetic case, in which the fracture half-length
evolution and propagation velocity match well with the reference solutions.
Additionally, the averaged fracture cross-section area, fracture volume, and
fracturing fluid efficiency can also be estimated, showing good agreements with
true values of the synthetic case under reasonable assumptions. Then a field
case with a single-cluster hydraulic fracturing treatment from the Hydraulic
Fracturing Test Site 2 project (HFTS2) is studied. Our analysis of the
inversion results reveal that the fracture propagates intermittently, as
evidenced by the fracture half-length evolution. This unique field evidence can
guide modeling efforts to incorporate this important physical behavior into
fracture models, and the secondary information gathered from the study,
including fracture cross-section area and volume, can help evaluate and
optimize fracturing efficiency. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2305.13138 |