This study addresses the key technical challenges in monitoring hydraulic fracturing within unconventional reservoirs through an innovative wide-field electromagnetic (WEM) monitoring technique. The method employs a 5A AC-excited wellbore-fracturing fluid system to establish a conductor antenna effect, coupled with a surface electrode array (100–250 m offset) to detect millivolt-level time-lapse potential anomalies, enabling real-time dynamic monitoring of 142 fracturing stages. A line current source integral model was developed to achieve quantitative fracture network inversion with less than 12% error, attaining 10 m spatial resolution and dynamic updates every 10 min (80% faster than conventional methods). Optimal engineering parameters were identified, including fluid intensity ranges of 25–30 m3/m for tight sandstone and 30–35 m3/m for shale, with particulate diverters achieving 93.1% diversion efficiency (significantly outperforming chemical diverters at 35%). Application in deep reservoirs maintained signal attenuation rates below 5% per kilometer. Theoretically, a nonlinear relationship model between fluid intensity and stimulated area was established, while practical implementation through real-time adjustments in 142 stages enhanced single-well production by 15–20% and reduced diverter costs, advancing the paradigm shift from empirical to scientific fracturing in unconventional reservoir development.
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Cheng Yu
Jiangsu University
Wenliang Zhang
South China University of Technology
Zongquan Liu
Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration and Development
Processes
Chengdu University of Technology
Daqing Oilfield General Hospital
Chengdu Surveying Geotechnical Research Institute
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Yu et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68d473a631b076d99fa6be3e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13093025