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A phase-field approach embedded in the Theory of Porous Media for the description of dynamic hydraulic fracturing

Hydraulic fracturing is a big issue in the exploitation of oil and gas resources as well as in the production of heat in deep geothermal energy plants. Investigating hydraulic fracturing processes numerically by means of a finite-element analysis, one has to address the porous solid and its pore con...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Computer methods in applied mechanics and engineering 2017-03, Vol.315, p.348-368
Main Authors: Ehlers, Wolfgang, Luo, Chenyi
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Hydraulic fracturing is a big issue in the exploitation of oil and gas resources as well as in the production of heat in deep geothermal energy plants. Investigating hydraulic fracturing processes numerically by means of a finite-element analysis, one has to address the porous solid and its pore content within a fully coupled computational approach. For this purpose, the present article combines the well-established Theory of Porous Media with elements of fracture mechanics, especially, with the phase-field approach to fracture, which has proven as a successful tool for the computation of fracturing processes in the field of standard solid mechanics. Although hydraulic fracturing is widely applied in practice, this procedure has not yet been investigated adequately by means of a full theoretical and computational framework on the basis of a multicomponent medium tackling a porous solid skeleton and its pore content with their mutual interaction of deformation and fracture, and fluid-driven processes both in the solid bulk and cracking domains. Addressing these features, the article concentrates on a permeable elastic solid skeleton, where the fracturing process is governed by brittle fracture driven either by a prescribed fluid pressure or by a prescribed fluid influx. Two- and three-dimensional numerical examples computed by use of the coupled solver PANDAS exhibit the possibilities of this approach. •Featuring fracking processes based of the TPM and a phase-field fracture model.•Using a fully coupled FEA for the fracturing solid and the pore-fluid flow.•Numerical examples for 2- and 3-dimensional problems.
ISSN:0045-7825
1879-2138
DOI:10.1016/j.cma.2016.10.045