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Factors controlling injection-induced rupture of intersecting faults during geological sequestration of CO2

Meng Cao, Jonny Rutqvist, Yves Guglielmi, Abdullah Cihan, Stanislav Glubokovskikh, Preston Jordan, Matthew T. Reagan, Jens Birkhölzer

2025International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study addresses coupled multiphase fluid flow and geomechanics effects on potential fault activation associated with subsurface CO 2 injection around intersecting faults. An enhanced fault-representation model is used to capture geomechanical responses of two intersecting faults with finite length during CO 2 injection. The faults are embedded in a strike-slip stress regime of a caprock-reservoir-basement system with the faults represented by zero-thickness interfaces with adjacent finite-thickness damage zones. A sensitivity analysis is conducted to study the effect of fault permeability, slip-weakening behavior, well location relative to the orientation of faults, and well placement (the number and location of injection wells). Five metrics (pressure, CO 2 plume, shear state on the fault, as well as shear displacement and stress path at selected fault monitoring points) are selected to assess CO 2 migration and reactivation of intersecting faults. The results show that induced ruptures are favored by low permeability faults due to high pressure buildup and by slip-weakening behavior resulting from fault strength reduction. The location of one injection well relative to fault orientation determines the magnitude of changes in effective normal stress and shear stress, affecting the location of induced ruptures. Well placement (two injection wells used in the paper) dominates pressure diffusion around the intersection and tips of faults. This redistributes changes in effective normal stress caused by each injection well, influencing the spatial distribution of ruptures along faults. A larger injection volume induces far-field ruptures that are controlled by stress transfer within the injection layer. The findings presented here can provide valuable insights into engineering operations for a long-term, safe, and reliable geologic CO 2 storage.

Topics & Concepts

GeomechanicsGeologyShear (geology)Shear stressFault (geology)Geotechnical engineeringPermeability (electromagnetism)Stress (linguistics)Pore water pressureFluid pressureDisplacement (psychology)Stress pathEffective stressStress fieldPetrologyFluid dynamicsInjection wellShear zoneFlow (mathematics)Magnitude (astronomy)MechanicsRelative permeabilityDiffusionInjection siteFault gougeCritical resolved shear stressCO2 Sequestration and Geologic InteractionsRock Mechanics and Modelingearthquake and tectonic studies
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