A solution to the problem of a hydraulic fracture driven by an incompressible Newtonian fluid at a constant injection rate in a permeable rock is presented in this paper. A set of governing equations are formed to obtain the fracture half-length, crack opening, and net fluid pressure. The solution is derived under the assumptions of plane strain, zero lag between fluid front and crack tip, followed by negligible fluid viscosity. The last assumption is related to a toughness-dominated fracture propagation regime therefore leading to a uniform fluid pressure along the crack surface. Early-time and late-time asymptotic solutions are obtained, which correspond to both regimes when the fluid contains within the crack and most of the injected fluid infiltrates into the rock, respectively. It is shown that these asymptotic solutions are in a simple form when the fracture propagation is dominated by the material toughness. The transient solution for the evolution from the early time to the late time is also obtained by a numerical method.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
July 2017
Research-Article
Toughness-Dominated Hydraulic Fracture in Permeable Rocks
Xuelin Dong,
Xuelin Dong
Key Laboratory of Petroleum Engineering,
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: dongxl@cup.edu.cn
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: dongxl@cup.edu.cn
Search for other works by this author on:
Guangqing Zhang,
Guangqing Zhang
Key Laboratory of Petroleum Engineering,
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: zhang@263.com
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: zhang@263.com
Search for other works by this author on:
Deli Gao,
Deli Gao
Key Laboratory of Petroleum Engineering,
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: gaodeli@cast.org.cn
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: gaodeli@cast.org.cn
Search for other works by this author on:
Zhiyin Duan
Zhiyin Duan
Beijing Key Lab of Heating,
Gas Supply, Ventilating and
Air Conditioning Engineering,
Beijing University of
Civil Engineering and Architecture,
1# Zhanlanguan Road,
Xicheng District,
Beijing 100044, China
e-mail: duanzhiyin@bucea.edu.cn
Gas Supply, Ventilating and
Air Conditioning Engineering,
Beijing University of
Civil Engineering and Architecture,
1# Zhanlanguan Road,
Xicheng District,
Beijing 100044, China
e-mail: duanzhiyin@bucea.edu.cn
Search for other works by this author on:
Xuelin Dong
Key Laboratory of Petroleum Engineering,
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: dongxl@cup.edu.cn
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: dongxl@cup.edu.cn
Guangqing Zhang
Key Laboratory of Petroleum Engineering,
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: zhang@263.com
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: zhang@263.com
Deli Gao
Key Laboratory of Petroleum Engineering,
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: gaodeli@cast.org.cn
China University of Petroleum,
18# Fuxue Road,
Changping District,
Beijing 102249, China
e-mail: gaodeli@cast.org.cn
Zhiyin Duan
Beijing Key Lab of Heating,
Gas Supply, Ventilating and
Air Conditioning Engineering,
Beijing University of
Civil Engineering and Architecture,
1# Zhanlanguan Road,
Xicheng District,
Beijing 100044, China
e-mail: duanzhiyin@bucea.edu.cn
Gas Supply, Ventilating and
Air Conditioning Engineering,
Beijing University of
Civil Engineering and Architecture,
1# Zhanlanguan Road,
Xicheng District,
Beijing 100044, China
e-mail: duanzhiyin@bucea.edu.cn
1Corresponding author.
Manuscript received February 28, 2017; final manuscript received April 2, 2017; published online April 28, 2017. Editor: Yonggang Huang.
J. Appl. Mech. Jul 2017, 84(7): 071001 (8 pages)
Published Online: April 28, 2017
Article history
Received:
February 28, 2017
Revised:
April 2, 2017
Connected Content
A companion article has been published:
Erratum: “Toughness-Dominated Hydraulic Fracture in Permeable Rocks” [ASME J. Appl. Mech., 2017, 84(7), p. 071001; DOI: 10.1115/1.4036475]
Citation
Dong, X., Zhang, G., Gao, D., and Duan, Z. (April 28, 2017). "Toughness-Dominated Hydraulic Fracture in Permeable Rocks." ASME. J. Appl. Mech. July 2017; 84(7): 071001. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4036475
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Cited By
Related Articles
Analysis of Leak-off Tests in Shallow Marine Sediments
J. Energy Resour. Technol (December,2002)
An Asymptotic Framework for the Analysis of Hydraulic Fractures: The Impermeable Case
J. Appl. Mech (March,2007)
Propagation of a Plane Strain Hydraulic Fracture With a Fluid Lag in Permeable Rock
J. Appl. Mech (September,2018)
Modeling Flow of a Biviscous Fluid From Borehole Into Rock Fracture
J. Appl. Mech (January,2006)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Simulation of the Fracture Network in the Inter-Bed Layered Rock Masses
Geological Engineering: Proceedings of the 1 st International Conference (ICGE 2007)
Recent Developments in J Ic Testing
Developments in Fracture Mechanics Test Methods Standardization
Fracture Testing with Surface Crack Specimens
Developments in Fracture Mechanics Test Methods Standardization