Tight Reservoir Rock Integrity - Experimentally Measured Pre-Failure Permeability Response to Stress Changes
Armitage, Peter J.1; Faulkner, Daniel R.1;
Worden, Richard H.1
(1)Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences,
University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
Detailed experimental studies of the development of permeability
in storage domain rocks during deformation are essential to understand
productivity from tight reservoir rocks and gas shales. The drilling of
boreholes, and increasing of fluid pressure for hydrofracturing creates changes
in stress, which will lead to the creation of a microfracture network. It has
been demonstrated from experiments and modelling that accumulation of
microfractures under differential stress before rock failure occurs
systematically and leads to enhanced porosity, permeability and fracture
surface area. Permeability was measured experimentally under various stress
regimes, at stages in the stress path up to failure of the sample. Stress
regimes were selected to recreate sub-hydrofracturing increases in pore fluid
pressure and stress concentrations around a borehole
. This was achieved using a
high-pressure triaxial deformation apparatus, which can recreate changing
reservoir pressure and fluid conditions. Samples tested included reservoir,
caprock, and fluid flow barrier rocks from a natural tight gas storage system,
and current CO2 storage reservoir, from the Krechba Field, Algeria. In the
example of stress concentrations around a
borehole
, stress change was found to
cause pre-failure permeability increase in all samples of up to two orders of
magnitude.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90135©2011 AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Milan, Italy, 23-26 October 2011.