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On subsurface fracture opening and closure

Wang, Yifeng

Understanding of subsurface fracture opening and closure is of great importance to oil/gas production, geothermal energy extraction, radioactive waste disposal, and carbon sequestration and storage. Fracture opening and closure involve a complex set of thermal, hydrologic, mechanical and chemical (THMC) processes. In this paper, a fully coupled THMC model for fracture opening and closure is formulated by explicitly accounting for the stress concentration on aperture surface, stress-activated mineral dissolution, pressure solution at contacting asperities, and channel flow dynamics. A model analysis, together with reported laboratory observations, shows that a tangential surface stress created by a far-field compressive normal stress may play an important role in controlling fracture aperture evolution in a stressed geologic medium, a mechanism that has not been considered in any existing models. Based on the model analysis, a necessary condition for aperture opening has been derived. The model provides a reasonable explanation for many salient features of fracture evolution in laboratory experiments, including a spontaneous switch from a permeability reduction to a permeability increase in a static limestone experiment. The work may also help develop a new method for estimating in-situ stress in a reservoir.