Enhanced Geothermal Systems could provide a substantial contribution to the global energy demand if their implementation could overcome challenges faced over the last four decades. Examples are insufficient created permeability, early thermal breakthrough, and unacceptable induced seismicity. Here we report on the seismic response of a meso-scale hydraulic fracturing experiment performed at 1.5 km depth at the Sanford Underground Research Facility. We have measured the seismic activity utilizing a novel 100 kHz, continuous seismic monitoring system deployed in six 60 m-length monitoring boreholes surrounding the experimental domain in 3-D. The achieved location uncertainty was on the order of 1 m, and limited by the signal-to-noise ratio of detected events. These uncertainties were corroborated by detections of fracture hits at the monitoring boreholes. Three locations of the dedicated injection borehole were hydraulically stimulated by water injection at pressures up to 33 MPa and flow rates up to 5 L/min. We located 1933 seismic events during several injection periods. The recorded seismicity delineates a complex fracture network comprised of multi-strand hydraulic fractures and shear-reactivated, pre-existing planes of weakness and growing unilaterally from the point of initiation. We find that heterogeneity of stress dictates the outcome of hydraulic stimulations, even when relying on theoretically well-behaved hydraulic fractures. Once fractures were intersected by boreholes, the boreholes acted as a pressure relief and fracture propagation ceased. In order to create an efficient sub-surface heat exchanger, production boreholes should not be drilled before the end of hydraulic stimulations
Revised: February 3, 2021 |
Published: December 31, 2020
Citation
Schoenball M., J. Ajo-Franklin, D.A. Blankenship, C. Chai, A. Chakravarty, P.F. Dobson, and C. Hopp, et al. 2020.Creation of a mixed-mode fracture network at mesoscale through hydraulic fracturing and shear stimulation.Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth 125, no. 12:e2020JB019807.PNNL-SA-151887.doi:10.1029/2020JB019807