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Abstract. This paper deals with growth of injection
hydrofractures in transient linear flow in a low permeability, soft
rock. Seventeen waterflood injectors in Section 12 of the Middle
Belridge diatomite, three steam injectors in Section 29 of the South
Belridge diatomite, as well as forty four injectors in the Lost Hills
I waterflood have been analyzed. The field data show that cumulative
injection of water or steam scales with time to the power of 1, rather
than ½ predicted from the theory of linear transient flow. In other
words, at constant injection pressure, injection rate is remarkably
constant. Therefore, either the injection hydrofractures grow with
time, or the formation permeability increases with time, or both. A
simple mass balance of hydrofracture growth during fluid injection,
attributed to Carter, is corrected, extended to the case of variable
injection pressure, and presented in a simplified form. The growth of
fracture area at constant injection rate is expressed in terms of two
easily measured field parameters, the early “injection slope” in
linear transient flow, and the average injection rate. Carter’s
fracture growth rate is further halved to account for the reservoir
layer homogeneity parallel and perpendicular to the hydrofracture
plane. The Carter theory predictions are then compared with the growth
rate of hydrofracture area calculated independently for two steam
injectors in Section 29. There is remarkable agreement between the
modified Carter theory predictions and the independently estimated
rates of growth of these two hydrofractures. We show that fluid
injection above a reasonable minimum rate must lead to hydrofracture
extension if injection pressure is bounded from above. Ultimately,
fracture growth is inevitable, regardless of mechanical design of
injection wells and injection policy. We also show that water
injection leads to less severe formation damage and fracture extension
than steam. By analyzing the thermal and pore stresses, we demonstrate
that steam injection may lead to the creation of horizontal fractures,
vertical fracture extension, and reservoir damage. Better control of
steam injection is, therefore, a must.
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