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Grain size effects on hydro-seismo-mechanical responses of granite during laboratory hydraulic fracturing

Xin Zhang, Guangyao Si, Yinlin Ji, Anye Cao, Changbin Wang

2025International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences8 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Geothermal energy in granite is becoming a significant renewable type, yet the hydrofracturing mechanisms within the coarse grains of granite remain largely unexplored. The triaxial hydraulic fracturing of granites with coarse grains has been simulated in laboratory settings to explore the influence of grain size on fracturing behaviour. Two types of granites with similar elastic properties but distinct grain sizes (>2.5 mm) have been examined. Source mechanism analysis indicates that in granitic coarse grains, tensile fractures are more prevalent than non-tensile fractures. The proportion of non-tensile cracks increases over time, notably after the occurrence of rock breakdown. Comparative analysis demonstrates that coarser grains are associated with reduced breakdown pressure, prolonged fracturing durations, a greater number of seismic events, lower seismic event magnitudes, and a higher proportion of tensile cracks. Interactions between hydraulic fractures and grains, such as ‘bypass’, ‘cross’, and ‘branching’, are interpreted and conceptualized based on the cohesive zone model. Our experiments also show that the fracture complexity comes from not only the fatigue hydraulic fracturing and low viscosity injection, but also continuous injection with coarse granite grains. Larger grains introduce greater fracture complexity.

Topics & Concepts

Hydraulic fracturingGeologyGrain sizeGeotechnical engineeringGeomorphologyRock Mechanics and ModelingHydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir AnalysisSeismic Imaging and Inversion Techniques