2018
DOI: 10.1029/2018jb015673
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Deformation Behavior of Sandstones From the Seismogenic Groningen Gas Field: Role of Inelastic Versus Elastic Mechanisms

Abstract: Reduction of pore fluid pressure in sandstone oil, gas, or geothermal reservoirs causes elastic and possibly inelastic compaction of the reservoir, which may lead to surface subsidence and induced seismicity. While elastic compaction is well described using poroelasticity, inelastic and especially time‐dependent compactions are poorly constrained, and the underlying microphysical mechanisms are insufficiently understood. To help bridge this gap, we performed conventional triaxial compression experiments on sam… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 134 publications
(288 reference statements)
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“…Summing up the elastic and inelastic contributions, we estimate a total vertical strain of 0.4% will have accumulated over the past 50 years of depletion. As can be seen, the inelastic component contributes approximately 50% to the total amount of deformation, which falls within the range previously reported in experimental studies on the strain partitioning in Slochteren sandstone during simulated pore pressure reduction (30-70%; Hol et al, 2015, Pijnenburg et al, 2018. Moreover, the modeled total strain of 0.4% corresponds suitably to the value of 0.3% estimated from in-situ compaction measurements in the Zeerijp-3 well (NAM, 2015;Cannon & Kole, 2017).…”
Section: Quantifying the Role Played By Clay Films In The Stage 2 Inesupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…Summing up the elastic and inelastic contributions, we estimate a total vertical strain of 0.4% will have accumulated over the past 50 years of depletion. As can be seen, the inelastic component contributes approximately 50% to the total amount of deformation, which falls within the range previously reported in experimental studies on the strain partitioning in Slochteren sandstone during simulated pore pressure reduction (30-70%; Hol et al, 2015, Pijnenburg et al, 2018. Moreover, the modeled total strain of 0.4% corresponds suitably to the value of 0.3% estimated from in-situ compaction measurements in the Zeerijp-3 well (NAM, 2015;Cannon & Kole, 2017).…”
Section: Quantifying the Role Played By Clay Films In The Stage 2 Inesupporting
confidence: 88%
“…The external, effective vertical ( σ 1 eff ) and horizontal ( σ 3 eff ) stresses are transmitted onto the clay‐filled, grain‐to‐grain contacts, where these are markedly enhanced due to the smaller contact area. For a porosity of 20% typical for the center of the Groningen field (NAM, ), the enhancement of the contact normal stress ( trueσ~) and the contact shear stress ( trueτ~) typically amounts to a factor of 3 (Pijnenburg, , Chapter 5). For our model configuration, this gives: trueσ~ ≈ 3 ( σ 1 eff + σ 3 eff )/2 and trueτ~ ≈ 3 ( σ 1 eff ‐ σ 3 eff )/2.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Standard plasticity models are usually unable to replicate plastic strains prior to the intersection of a yield surface and neglect any inelastic deformation caused by loadingunloading cycles taking place in the pre-yielding regime. However, ample evidence has proved that plastic strains start to accumulate much earlier than the classic yielding cap (van Thienen-Visser and Fokker, 2017; Pijnenburg et al, 2018;Hol et al, 2018). To circumevent this limitation, hypo-plastic modeling techniques can be incorporated (Einav, 2012).…”
Section: Simulation Of Cyclic Depletion-inflation Pathsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Upon production, the pore pressure ( P p ) in the reservoir decreases relative to the overburden stress ( σ v ), which increases the vertical effective stress ( σ v ,eff = σ v − P p ) acting on the load‐bearing structure of the reservoir rock. This leads to recoverable poroelastic and, in some cases, permanent, inelastic compaction of the reservoir rock (Bernabé et al, ; Pijnenburg et al, ; Shalev et al, ), potentially with a time‐ (creep) or rate‐dependent component (Doornhof et al, ; Nagel, ). Permanent compaction occurs when the effective stress acting on the rock becomes large enough to activate inelastic grain‐scale deformation processes, such as grain rearrangement (Menéndez et al, ), grain and grain contact failure by equilibrium or subcritical crack growth (Brantut et al, ; Brzesowsky, Hangx, et al, ; Brzesowsky, Spiers, et al, ), intergranular clay film deformation (Spiers et al, ), pressure solution (Dewers & Hajash, ; Gratier et al, ; Schutjens, ; Spiers et al, ), and intergranular frictional slip (Spiers et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%