Cement Patterns Control Fracture Porosity Preservation in Tight Gas Sandstones
By
Stephen Laubach1, Julia Gale1, Jon Olson1, Linda Bonnell2, Rob Lander2
(1) University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX (2) GEOCOSM, Austin,
Comparisons of measured stress directions and orientations of
open
,
flow-controlling fractures show that
open
fractures in the subsurface are not
necessarily parallel to maximum compressive stress (SHmax ) and that fractures
perpendicular to this direction may be
open
. Examples from the upper Gulf Coast
basin, the interior compressional stress province, and western U.S. extensional
stress province have stress, fracture, and production data from depths of 2400m
to 6400m.
The divergence between
open
fractures demonstrably contributing to fluid flow
and SHmax ranges from a few degrees to 90 degrees. Moreover, sealed fractures
parallel to SHmax are numerous. Parallelism of modern-day principal stresses and
open
fractures is not good evidence, by itself, that modern day stress controls
the orientation of
open
fractures. A determining factor for fluid flow is the
degree of mineral cement deposited within fractures. This is a function of
fracture size and the rock’s diagenetic history. In most subsurface opening-mode
fracture systems, fractures are partially filled with a syn-kinematic cement
deposited at the time of fracturing. This cement tends to form strong mineral
bridges that prop the fracture
open
. The remaining part of the fracture is
open
or may be filled with post-kinematic cements precipitated after fractures ceased
opening.
For the many reservoirs where opening mode fractures are the key flow
pathways, cement patterns rather than stress data may provide the insight needed
to determine which fractures are
open
to fluid flow.
