Why Fracking Works and How to Optimize It
Z.P. Bazant, M. Salviato, V.T. Chau

TL;DR
This paper explains how fracking works by preventing localization instabilities through uniform pressure profiles along hydraulic cracks, which can be optimized to improve efficiency and reduce environmental impact.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework linking pressure profile uniformity to crack stability, offering new insights for optimizing hydraulic fracturing processes.
Findings
Uniform pressure profiles prevent crack localization.
Numerical models support the stability mechanism.
Proppants and acids help limit crack closing.
Abstract
Although spectacular advances in hydraulic fracturing, aka fracking, have taken place and many aspects are well understood by now, the topology, geometry and evolution of the crack system hydraulically produced in the shale still remains an enigma. Expert opinions differ widely and fracture mechanicians must wonder why fracking works. Fracture mechanics of individual pressurized cracks has recently been clarified but the vital problem of stability of interacting hydraulic cracks escaped attention. Progress in this regard would likely allow optimization of fracking and reduction of environmental footprint. The present article first focuses on the classical solutions of the critical states of localization instability of a system of cooling or shrinkage cracks and shows that these solutions can be transferred to the system of hydraulic cracks. It is concluded that if the profile of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHydraulic Fracturing and Reservoir Analysis · Hydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis · Drilling and Well Engineering
