PERPUSTAKAAN BIG

  • Beranda
  • Informasi
  • Berita
  • Bantuan
  • Area Pustakawan
  • Area Anggota
  • Pilih Bahasa :
    Bahasa Arab Bahasa Bengal Bahasa Brazil Portugis Bahasa Inggris Bahasa Spanyol Bahasa Jerman Bahasa Indonesia Bahasa Jepang Bahasa Melayu Bahasa Persia Bahasa Rusia Bahasa Thailand Bahasa Turki Bahasa Urdu

Pencarian berdasarkan :

SEMUA Pengarang Subjek ISBN/ISSN Pencarian Spesifik

Pencarian terakhir:

{{tmpObj[k].text}}
Image of Outcrop-Scale Hydraulic Fracturing Experiments with a Coagulable Resin and Data Analysis Results
Penanda Bagikan

Text

Outcrop-Scale Hydraulic Fracturing Experiments with a Coagulable Resin and Data Analysis Results

Tsutau Takeuchi - Nama Orang; Akira Fujimoto - Nama Orang; Ryohei Inoue - Nama Orang; Tsuyoshi Ishida - Nama Orang; Takashi Danjo - Nama Orang; Tatsuya Yokoyama - Nama Orang; Hirokazu Fujii - Nama Orang;

Hydraulic fracturing is a crucial technology for resource development, such as shale gas, and its optimization is necessary to enhance development efficiency. However, evaluating fracture shapes involves technical uncertainties. Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security (JOGMEC) and Kyoto University have conducted laboratory-scale hydraulic fracturing experiments using coagulable fluorescent resin as the injection fluid (resin fracturing test) to visualize hydraulic fractures and investigate their relationship with acoustic emissions (AEs) generated during fracturing. Since lab-scale experiments can only examine the phenomena near the injection hole owing to size limitations, we designed an experiment to apply the visualization method to the outcrop scale. This paper presents the results from an in situ, outcrop-scale hydraulic fracturing experiment conducted at the Kamioka Mine, Gifu Prefecture, Japan, from 2022 to 2023, with goals similar to those of the laboratory experiments. A resin fracturing borehole (RF1) with a diameter of 76 mm was core-drilled to a depth of approximately 10 m for the resin fracturing tests. AEs were observed in five boreholes drilled around RF1 at the same depth. Resin fracturing tests were performed at two different depths, with breakdown confirmed at both. A core of a larger diameter (205 mm) was recovered by coaxial overcoring around RF1, and resin-filled fractures were observed under black light on the core surfaces. After the resin fracturing experiment, two analyses were performed using the acquired core and AE data to predict the fracture extension and the mechanism of AE occurrence. We compared the distribution of AE events and visualized fractures in the core. Additionally, we compared the stress direction estimated from failure mechanism analysis using AE data with the maximum stress direction estimated from hydraulic fracturing. Our analysis provided several insights into fracture extension. The distribution of AE hypocenters was consistent with the direction of the hydraulic fractures confirmed by coring after the resin fracturing test. The failure mechanisms are classified based on the polarity of the first P-wave motion of the AE waveform. However, the actual scale of oil fields is significantly larger than that considered in this study. Discussing visible fractures created by hydraulic fracturing is deemed meaningful. We expect that the results of this study will provide valuable information for the precise estimation of hydraulic fractures.


Ketersediaan
#
Perpustakaan BIG (Eksternal Harddisk) 550
434
Tersedia
Informasi Detail
Judul Seri
Geosciences
No. Panggil
550
Penerbit
Switzerland : MPDI., 2025
Deskripsi Fisik
18 hllm PDF, 2.715 KB
Bahasa
Inggris
ISBN/ISSN
2076-3263
Klasifikasi
550
Tipe Isi
text
Tipe Media
-
Tipe Pembawa
online resource
Edisi
Vol.15, Issue 3, March 2025
Subjek
Visualization
hydraulic fracturing
acoustic emission
Info Detail Spesifik
Geosciences
Pernyataan Tanggungjawab
-
Versi lain/terkait

Tidak tersedia versi lain

Lampiran Berkas
  • Outcrop-Scale Hydraulic Fracturing Experiments with a Coagulable Resin and Data Analysis Results
    Hydraulic fracturing is a crucial technology for resource development, such as shale gas, and its optimization is necessary to enhance development efficiency. However, evaluating fracture shapes involves technical uncertainties. Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security (JOGMEC) and Kyoto University have conducted laboratory-scale hydraulic fracturing experiments using coagulable fluorescent resin as the injection fluid (resin fracturing test) to visualize hydraulic fractures and investigate their relationship with acoustic emissions (AEs) generated during fracturing. Since lab-scale experiments can only examine the phenomena near the injection hole owing to size limitations, we designed an experiment to apply the visualization method to the outcrop scale. This paper presents the results from an in situ, outcrop-scale hydraulic fracturing experiment conducted at the Kamioka Mine, Gifu Prefecture, Japan, from 2022 to 2023, with goals similar to those of the laboratory experiments. A resin fracturing borehole (RF1) with a diameter of 76 mm was core-drilled to a depth of approximately 10 m for the resin fracturing tests. AEs were observed in five boreholes drilled around RF1 at the same depth. Resin fracturing tests were performed at two different depths, with breakdown confirmed at both. A core of a larger diameter (205 mm) was recovered by coaxial overcoring around RF1, and resin-filled fractures were observed under black light on the core surfaces. After the resin fracturing experiment, two analyses were performed using the acquired core and AE data to predict the fracture extension and the mechanism of AE occurrence. We compared the distribution of AE events and visualized fractures in the core. Additionally, we compared the stress direction estimated from failure mechanism analysis using AE data with the maximum stress direction estimated from hydraulic fracturing. Our analysis provided several insights into fracture extension. The distribution of AE hypocenters was consistent with the direction of the hydraulic fractures confirmed by coring after the resin fracturing test. The failure mechanisms are classified based on the polarity of the first P-wave motion of the AE waveform. However, the actual scale of oil fields is significantly larger than that considered in this study. Discussing visible fractures created by hydraulic fracturing is deemed meaningful. We expect that the results of this study will provide valuable information for the precise estimation of hydraulic fractures.
    Other Resource Link
Komentar

Anda harus masuk sebelum memberikan komentar

PERPUSTAKAAN BIG
  • Informasi
  • Layanan
  • Pustakawan
  • Area Anggota

Tentang Kami

Perpustakaan Badan Informasi Geospasial adalah perpustakaan yang dikelola oleh Badan Informasi Geospasial. Perpustakaan ini memiliki koleksi yang berkaitan dengan informasi geospasial dan literatur terkait lainnya.

Statistik Pengunjung Web

Hari Ini : 1 Pekan Terakhir : 1 Bulan Terakhir : Total Kunjungan :

Cari

masukkan satu atau lebih kata kunci dari judul, pengarang, atau subjek

Donasi untuk SLiMS Kontribusi untuk SLiMS?

© 2026 — Senayan Developer Community

Ditenagai oleh SLiMS
Pilih subjek yang menarik bagi Anda
  • Batas Wilayah
  • Ekologi
  • Fotogrametri
  • Geografi
  • Geologi
  • GIS
  • Ilmu Tanah
  • Kartografi
  • Manajemen Bencana
  • Oceanografi
  • Penginderaan Jauh
  • Peta
Icons made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com
Pencarian Spesifik