Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions

Understanding the hydraulic and frictional sensitivity of fault to different injection conditions is one of the efficient ways to provide useful implications for fault reactivation potential. Numerical simulations of fractured reservoir have provided information on how fault behaviour varies under c...

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Main Authors: Dorcas S. Eyinla, Michael A. Oladunjoye, Quan Gan, Abel I. Olayinka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2021-09-01
Series:Petroleum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405656120300948
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spelling doaj-9f56aa4dbead49eda85ffce938c1d6e32021-09-25T05:09:06ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Petroleum2405-65612021-09-0173282293Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditionsDorcas S. Eyinla0Michael A. Oladunjoye1Quan Gan2Abel I. Olayinka3Department of Geology, Pan African University, Life and Earth Sciences Institute (PAULESI), University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria; Department of Earth Sciences, Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba Akoko, Nigeria; Department of Petroleum Geology and Geology, School of Geosciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK; Corresponding author.Department of Geology, Pan African University, Life and Earth Sciences Institute (PAULESI), University of Ibadan, Ibadan, NigeriaDepartment of Petroleum Geology and Geology, School of Geosciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, UKDepartment of Geology, Pan African University, Life and Earth Sciences Institute (PAULESI), University of Ibadan, Ibadan, NigeriaUnderstanding the hydraulic and frictional sensitivity of fault to different injection conditions is one of the efficient ways to provide useful implications for fault reactivation potential. Numerical simulations of fractured reservoir have provided information on how fault behaviour varies under changing hydromechanical properties and injection conditions. A coupled hydro-mechanical model which can represent the elastoplastic behaviour of a fault was employed to predict and quantify the effects of varying injection positions and injection rates on permeability response and potential of fault reactivation under isothermal injection. We examine the sensitivity of seismic event magnitude and timing to variations in both pressure perturbation and stress as injection location changes. We generate results for two scenarios: one with changing injection position but with uniform injection rate, and another scenario with increasing injection rate at the same injection position. We observed that the potential of fault reactivation is affected by the hydraulic diffusivity potential of the fluid pressure, and this mechanism is mediated by a function of the injector position and injection rate. As the velocity of fluid transmission increases, increasing fluid pressure impact pore pressure elevation and reduced effective stress. However, an injector position where there is low diffusivity causes low pore pressure build-up rate, incapable of inducing shear failure, and thus, permeability enhancement is retarded in this case. Accordingly, the injection rate variation influences the rate of pore pressure build-up, the timing and magnitude of induced seismic events. This is also reflected in the permeability evolution as a response to the variations in the magnitude of fault openings and cracks. This changing injection conditions however influences the timing required to reach the critical peak friction point as pore pressure build-up rate and sensitivity to loading response change. Hence, with changing position and rate of injection, the evolution of fault permeability appears to be intrinsically controlled by a condition which favours elastoplastic deformation and fracture failure, with slip distance increasing with high injection rates.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405656120300948Fluid pressure diffusivityShear deformationPressure elevationInjector locationSlip magnitude
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dorcas S. Eyinla
Michael A. Oladunjoye
Quan Gan
Abel I. Olayinka
spellingShingle Dorcas S. Eyinla
Michael A. Oladunjoye
Quan Gan
Abel I. Olayinka
Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions
Petroleum
Fluid pressure diffusivity
Shear deformation
Pressure elevation
Injector location
Slip magnitude
author_facet Dorcas S. Eyinla
Michael A. Oladunjoye
Quan Gan
Abel I. Olayinka
author_sort Dorcas S. Eyinla
title Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions
title_short Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions
title_full Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions
title_fullStr Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions
title_full_unstemmed Fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions
title_sort fault reactivation potential and associated permeability evolution under changing injection conditions
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Petroleum
issn 2405-6561
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Understanding the hydraulic and frictional sensitivity of fault to different injection conditions is one of the efficient ways to provide useful implications for fault reactivation potential. Numerical simulations of fractured reservoir have provided information on how fault behaviour varies under changing hydromechanical properties and injection conditions. A coupled hydro-mechanical model which can represent the elastoplastic behaviour of a fault was employed to predict and quantify the effects of varying injection positions and injection rates on permeability response and potential of fault reactivation under isothermal injection. We examine the sensitivity of seismic event magnitude and timing to variations in both pressure perturbation and stress as injection location changes. We generate results for two scenarios: one with changing injection position but with uniform injection rate, and another scenario with increasing injection rate at the same injection position. We observed that the potential of fault reactivation is affected by the hydraulic diffusivity potential of the fluid pressure, and this mechanism is mediated by a function of the injector position and injection rate. As the velocity of fluid transmission increases, increasing fluid pressure impact pore pressure elevation and reduced effective stress. However, an injector position where there is low diffusivity causes low pore pressure build-up rate, incapable of inducing shear failure, and thus, permeability enhancement is retarded in this case. Accordingly, the injection rate variation influences the rate of pore pressure build-up, the timing and magnitude of induced seismic events. This is also reflected in the permeability evolution as a response to the variations in the magnitude of fault openings and cracks. This changing injection conditions however influences the timing required to reach the critical peak friction point as pore pressure build-up rate and sensitivity to loading response change. Hence, with changing position and rate of injection, the evolution of fault permeability appears to be intrinsically controlled by a condition which favours elastoplastic deformation and fracture failure, with slip distance increasing with high injection rates.
topic Fluid pressure diffusivity
Shear deformation
Pressure elevation
Injector location
Slip magnitude
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405656120300948
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AT abeliolayinka faultreactivationpotentialandassociatedpermeabilityevolutionunderchanginginjectionconditions
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