Abstract
Small-scale laboratory experiments are performed to study the effects of frictional characteristics on hydraulic fracture growth across unbonded interfaces in rocks. Various lubricants and mechanical preparations of the interface surfaces are used to vary the coefficients of friction on the interface surfaces. It is found that the frictional shear stress that the interface surface can support determines whether a hydraulically driven crack will cross the interface. Experiments also are being performed to study the effects of pre-existing cracks, which perpendicularly intersect the unbonded interface, on hydraulic crack growth across the interface.
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CITATION STYLE
Hanson, M. E., Shaffer, R. J., & Anderson, G. D. (1981). EFFECTS OF VARIOUS PARAMETERS ON HYDRAULIC FRACTURING GEOMETRY. Society of Petroleum Engineers Journal, 21(4), 435–443. https://doi.org/10.2118/8942-PA
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