CHAI Nina, LI Jiarui, ZHANG Liwen, et al. Experimental study on hydraulic fracture propagation in interbedded continental shale oil reservoirs[J]. Petroleum Reservoir Evaluation and Development, 2025, 15(1): 124-130. DOI: 10.13809/j.cnki.cn32-1825/te.2025.01.016.
The Yanchang Formation in the Ordos Basin has deposited a set of mudshales and fine-grained sandy rocks
rich in shale oil resources
with an estimated resource potential exceeding billions of tons. However
shale oil reservoirs exhibit poor mobility
shallow burial depths
the development of bedding
fractures
and faults in horizontal sections
and unknown fracture propagation patterns
making volumetric fracturing challenging. To address this
cement-encased cores of full-diameter tight sandstone-mudstone and shale from the sublayer in the seventh member of the Yanchang Formation (Chang 7) were used in actual triaxial hydraulic fracturing physical model experiments. These experiments revealed hydraulic fracture morphologies and the fracture propagation mechanism under weak stress fields in shale oil reservoirs. The experiments found that shale oil reservoirs had tight layered structures and weak bonding between rock grains
causing fracturing fluid to easily infiltrate along bedding planes. When the difference between vertical stress and minimum horizontal principal stress was less than 2 MPa
hydraulic fractures predominantly formed horizontal fractures
with the fluid primarily infiltrating along bedding planes or horizontal natural fractures. When this stress difference increased to 7 MPa
vertical cross-layer fractures appeared
forming localized steps that eventually became captured by weakly bonded bedding planes
propagating horizontally along the layers. For fracturing operations
regions with a larger difference between vertical stress and minimum horizontal principal stress
such as wellheads at hilltops
are preferred. This facilitates vertical fracture propagation
improves volumetric fracturing effectiveness in reservoirs