Unconventional oil and gas reservoirs naturally have low porosity and low permeability, which necessitate reservoir stimulation during production to achieve commercial exploitation. Therefore, to improve reservoir stimulation effectiveness, this study established a thermal–hydraulic–mechanical coupled numerical model suitable for hydraulic fracturing experiment scales based on rock mechanics, elasticity mechanics, damage mechanics, and flow mechanics theories, combined with maximum principal stress and Mohr–Coulomb damage criteria. The model was numerically solved within a finite element framework and used to simulate the reservoir hydraulic fracturing process. The results indicate that the propagation behavior of hydraulic fractures is controlled by reservoir rock mechanical properties, geostresses, reservoir temperatures, fracturing fluid viscosities, and injection rates. Among these, the increase in principal stress difference, reservoir temperature, fracturing fluid viscosity and injection rate promotes the propagation of hydraulic fractures along the direction of the maximum horizontal principal stress, whereas an increase in the rock’s elastic modulus reduces the propagation length of the hydraulic fractures. During fracturing, the fracturing fluid fractures the reservoir rock, significantly improving its porosity and permeability. This not only enhances the mobilization of unconventional oil and gas resources but also provides effective flow pathways for their migration, thereby ensuring the commercial viability of unconventional oil and gas resource extraction. Additionally, selecting a fracturing process that matches the geological characteristics of the study area during fracturing design is a prerequisite for improving the reservoir stimulation effect. The results of this study provide a reference for fracturing design and optimization.
He et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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