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Multiscale Characterization of Fracture Patterns: A Case Study of the Noble Hills Range (Death Valley, CA, USA), Application to Geothermal Reservoirs

Arezki Chabani, Ghislain Trullenque, Béatrice Ledésert, Johanne Klee

2021Geosciences50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the basement fractured reservoirs, geometric parameters of fractures constitute the main properties for modeling and prediction of reservoir behavior and then fluid flow. This study aims to propose geometric description and quantify the multiscale network organization and its effect on connectivity using a wide-ranging scale analysis and orders scale classification. This work takes place in the Noble Hills (NH) range, located in the Death Valley (DV, USA). The statistical analyses were performed from regional maps to thin sections. The combination of the length datasets has led to compute a power law exponent around −2, meaning that the connectivity is ruled by the small and the large fractures. Three domains have been highlighted in the NH: (1) domain A is characterized by a dominance of the NW/SE direction at the fourth order scale; (2) domain B is characterized by a dominance of the E/W and the NW/SE directions at respectively the fourth and third order scales; (3) domain C is also marked by the E/W direction dominance followed by the NW/SE direction respectively at the fourth and third order scale. The numerical simulations should consider that the orientation depends on scale observation, while the length is independent of scale observation.

Topics & Concepts

Geothermal gradientGeologyScale (ratio)Dominance (genetics)ScalingRange (aeronautics)Fracture (geology)Domain (mathematical analysis)Orientation (vector space)GeometryCartographyGeophysicsMathematicsMaterials scienceGeotechnical engineeringGeographyGeneMathematical analysisBiochemistryComposite materialChemistryGroundwater flow and contamination studiesRock Mechanics and ModelingLandslides and related hazards