MR51A-05
Influence of Composition and Deformation Conditions on the Strength and Brittleness of Shale Rock

Friday, 18 December 2015: 09:00
301 (Moscone South)
Erik Rybacki1, Andreas Reinicke2, Tobias Meier3, Masline Makasi4 and Georg H Dresen1, (1)Helmholtz Centre Potsdam GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany, (2)Shell P&T Production Enhancement and Well Construction R&D, Rijswijk, Netherlands, (3)geomecon, Potsdam, Germany, (4)Glencore Mount Isa Mines, Mount Isa, Australia
Abstract:
Stimulation of shale gas reservoirs by hydraulic fracturing operations aims to increase the production rate by increasing the rock surface connected to the borehole. Prospective shales are often believed to display high strength and brittleness to decrease the breakdown pressure required to (re-) initiate a fracture as well as slow healing of natural and hydraulically induced fractures to increase the lifetime of the fracture network.

Laboratory deformation tests were performed on several, mainly European black shales with different mineralogical composition, porosity and maturity at ambient and elevated pressures and temperatures. Mechanical properties such as compressive strength and elastic moduli strongly depend on shale composition, porosity, water content, structural anisotropy, and on pressure (P) and temperature (T) conditions, but less on strain rate. We observed a transition from brittle to semibrittle deformation at high P-T conditions, in particular for high porosity shales. At given P-T conditions, the variation of compressive strength and Young’s modulus with composition can be roughly estimated from the volumetric proportion of all components including organic matter and pores.

We determined also brittleness index values based on pre-failure deformation behavior, Young’s modulus and bulk composition. At low P-T conditions, where samples showed pronounced post-failure weakening, brittleness may be empirically estimated from bulk composition or Young’s modulus. Similar to strength, at given P-T conditions, brittleness depends on the fraction of all components and not the amount of a specific component, e.g. clays, alone. Beside strength and brittleness, knowledge of the long term creep properties of shales is required to estimate in-situ stress anisotropy and the healing of (propped) hydraulic fractures.