Anisotropy in Fracking: A Percolation Model for Observed Microseismicity
J. Quinn Norris, Donald L. Turcotte, John B. Rundle

TL;DR
This paper models the anisotropic effects in hydraulic fracturing using invasion percolation to simulate microseismic activity, revealing burst dynamics and spatial distributions consistent with observed microseismicity.
Contribution
It introduces a 2D percolation model incorporating anisotropic stress to simulate microseismic bursts during fracking, aligning with real seismic data.
Findings
Burst dynamics correlate with microseismic activity.
Spatial distribution of bursts matches observed seismic patterns.
Frequency-size statistics follow Gutenberg-Richter law.
Abstract
Hydraulic fracturing (fracking) using high pressures and a low viscosity fluid allow the extraction of large quantiles of oil and gas from very low permeability shale formations. The initial production of oil and gas at depth leads to high pressures and an extensive distribution of natural fractures which reduce the pressures. With time these fractures heal, sealing the remaining oil and gas in place. High volume fracking opens the healed fractures allowing the oil and gas to flow the horizontal productions wells. We model the injection process using invasion percolation. We utilize a 2D square lattice of bonds to model the sealed natural fractures. The bonds are assigned random strengths and the fluid, injected at a point, opens the weakest bond adjacent to the growing cluster of opened bonds. Our model exhibits burst dynamics in which the clusters extends rapidly into regions with…
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