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Poroelasticity Contributes to Hydraulic‐Stimulation Induced Pressure Changes

Nathan Dutler, Benoît Valley, Florian Amann, Mohammadreza Jalali, Linus Villiger, Hannes Krietsch, Valentin Gischig, Joseph Doetsch, Domenico Giardini

2021Geophysical Research Letters12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract High‐pressure fluid injections cause transient pore pressure changes over large distances, which may induce seismicity. The zone of influence for such an injection was studied at high spatial resolutions in six decameter‐scaled fluid injection experiments in crystalline rock. Pore pressure time series revealed two distinct responses based on the lag time and magnitude of pressure change, namely, a near‐ and far‐field response. The near‐field response is due to pressure diffusion. In the far‐field, the fast response time and decay of pressure changes are produced by effective stress changes in the anisotropic stress field. Our experiments confirm that fracture fluid pressure perturbations around the injection point are not limited to the near field and can extend beyond the pressurized zone.

Topics & Concepts

Pore water pressurePoromechanicsGeologyDiffusionFluid pressureAnisotropyStress (linguistics)Field (mathematics)MechanicsStress fieldInduced seismicityHydraulic fracturingGeotechnical engineeringMaterials scienceSeismologyPorous mediumPhysicsOpticsPorosityThermodynamicsPure mathematicsPhilosophyMathematicsFinite element methodLinguisticsSeismic Imaging and Inversion TechniquesSeismic Waves and Analysisearthquake and tectonic studies
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