Multi-stage multi-cluster hydraulic fracturing in conglomerate reservoirs is often characterized by strong cluster-to-cluster variability in fluid distribution, which can reduce stimulation efficiency. However, field-scale observations that constrain how injected fluid is partitioned among clusters remain limited, especially in strongly heterogeneous formations. In this study, wide-field electromagnetic (WFEM) monitoring was applied to a horizontal well completed in the Baikouquan Formation sandstone–conglomerate reservoir of the Mahu Sag, Junggar Basin. The monitored treatment consisted of 13 fracturing stages, each containing six perforation clusters. Time-lapse electromagnetic data acquired during pumping were inverted to reconstruct the spatiotemporal evolution of the effective conductive fluid-swept region. Based on the inversion results, we introduce a set of quantitative proxy indicators (swept area, swept length, cluster-specific sweep, and an asymmetric index) to support relative comparison of fluid distribution patterns at both stage and cluster scales. Results show pronounced non-uniformity within and between stages, even under similar pumping conditions. A limited number of clusters exhibit stronger and farther-reaching WFEM-inferred conductive-fluid responses, whereas other clusters show weaker or more localized responses. Asymmetric sweep patterns on opposite sides of the wellbore are also commonly observed. These patterns are consistent with the combined influences of reservoir heterogeneity, local structural/stress disturbances, and operational factors, although WFEM alone does not uniquely validate causal mechanisms of fracture growth. Overall, this study demonstrates that WFEM monitoring provides a field-scale proxy tool for delineating effective conductive fluid-swept regions and for evaluating cluster-to-cluster variability under consistent acquisition and inversion settings. The findings offer practical guidance for interpreting fluid distribution and optimizing multi-cluster fracturing in strongly heterogeneous unconventional reservoirs.
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Xiaodong Guo
China University of Petroleum, Beijing
Shicheng Zhang
China University of Petroleum, Beijing
Jingchen Zhang
China University of Petroleum, Beijing
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Guo et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a52dbff1e85e5c73bf0e25 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/app16052350