International Journal of the JSRM
Online ISSN : 2189-8405
Long-term Observation of Permeability in Sedimentary Rocks under High Temperature and Stress Conditions and Its Interpretation Mediated by Microstructural Investigations
Hideaki YASUHARANaoki KINOSHITAHiroaki OHFUJIManabu TAKAHASHIKazumasa ITOKiyoshi KISHIDA
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2016 年 12 巻 1 号 p. 11-13

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This article is the summary of the published paper (Yasuhara et al. 2015). In this study, a series of long-term, intermittent permeability experiments utilizing Berea sandstone and Horonobe mudstone samples, with and without a single artificial fracture, is conducted for more than 1000 days to examine the evolution of rock permeability under relatively high temperature and confining pressure conditions. Effluent element concentrations are also measured throughout the experiments. Before and after flow-through experiments, rock samples are prepared for X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence, and scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy to examine the mineralogical changes between pre- and post-experimental samples, and also for micro-focus X-ray CT to evaluate the alteration of the microstructure. Although there are exceptions, the observed, qualitative evolution of permeability is found to be generally consistent in both the intact and the fractured rock samples – the permeability in the intact rock samples increases with time after experiencing no significant changes in permeability for the first several hundred days, while that in the fractured rock samples decreases with time. An evaluation of the Damkohler number and of the net dissolution, using the measured element concentrations, reveals that the increase in permeability can most likely be attributed to the relative dominance of the mineral dissolution in the pore spaces, while the decrease can most likely be attributed to the mineral dissolution/crushing at the propping asperities within the fracture.

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