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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties of shale-gas reservoir rocks — Part 2: Ductile creep, brittle strength, and their relation to the elastic modulus

Hiroki Sone, +1 more
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
- Vol. 78, Iss: 5
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors studied the elastic moduli, ductile creep behavior, and brittle strength of shale-gas reservoir rocks from Barnett, Haynesville, Eagle Ford, and FortSt. John shale in a series of triaxial laboratory experiments.
Abstract
We studied the elastic moduli, ductile creep behavior, and brittle strength of shale-gas reservoir rocks from Barnett, Haynesville, Eagle Ford, and FortSt. John shale in a series of triaxial laboratory experiments. We found a strong correlation between the shale compositions, in particular, the volume of clay plus kerogen and intact rock strength, frictional strength, and viscoplastic creep. Viscoplastic creep strain was approximately linear with the applied differential stress. The reduction in sample volume during creep suggested that the creep was accommodated by slight pore compaction. In a manner similar to instantaneous strain, there was more viscoplastic creep in samples deformed perpendicular to the bedding than parallel to the bedding. The tendency to creep also correlated well with the static Young’s modulus. We explained this apparent correlation between creep behavior and elastic modulus by appealing to the stress partitioning that occurs between the soft components of the shales (clay and kerogen) and the stiff components (quartz, feldspar, pyrite, and carbonates). Through a simple 1D analysis, we found that a unique relation between the creep compliance and elastic modulus, independent of composition and orientation, can be established by considering the individual creep behavior of the soft and stiff components that arises from the stress partitioning within the rock. This appears to provide a mechanical explanation for why long-term ductile deformational properties can appear to correlate with short-term elastic properties in shale-gas reservoir rocks.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties of shale-gas reservoir rocks — Part 1: Static and dynamic elastic properties and anisotropy

TL;DR: In this paper, the static and dynamic elastic properties of shale gas reservoir rocks from Barnett, Haynesville, Eagle Ford, and Fort St. John shales through laboratory experiments were studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Time-dependent deformation of shale gas reservoir rocks and its long-term effect on the in situ state of stress

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of time-dependent deformation on the in situ differential stress in shale gas reservoir rocks was evaluated using linear viscoelastic theory and using laboratory constrained constitutive parameters, which indicated that a significant proportion of a differential stress change would be relaxed over time-scales on the order of days.
Journal ArticleDOI

What controls the mechanical properties of shale rocks? – Part II: Brittleness

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed existing brittleness indices (B) and applied several, partly redefined, definitions relying on composition and deformation behavior on various, mainly European black shales with different mineralogical composition, porosity and maturity.
Journal ArticleDOI

What controls the mechanical properties of shale rocks? – Part I: Strength and Young's modulus

TL;DR: In this article, the uniaxial and triaxial compressive strength, tensile strength and static Young's modulus were measured at varying confining pressures, temperatures and strain rates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Instrumented nanoindentation and 3D mechanistic modeling of a shale at multiple scales

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used nonlinear finite element modeling utilizing an isotropic critical state theory with creep to capture the indentation response by calibrating plastic material parameters to the laboratory measurements.
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