To investigate the mechanisms of coal seam reservoir modification and the efficient development of surface coalbed methane (CBM), the coal with different structural formations in the 13-1 coal seam of Huainan Mining Area was selected as the research object. Fracturing numerical simulation technology was employed to analyze the effect of hydraulic fracturing on tectonic coal reservoirs and explore the mechanism of fracturing-induced gas production. The results show that fragmented coal contains well-developed face and butt cleats, and distinct fracture models were constructed for the three tectonic coal types. Granulated and mylonitic structural coals exhibit larger total pore volumes and higher proportions of pores larger than 10 nm than fragmented coal. Both tectonic coal types exhibit a high proportion of methane flow space, with rapid methane desorption and diffusion under high pressure and stable behavior under low pressure. Pore volume compressibility calculations indicate that tectonic coal exhibits poor compressibility. Numerical simulations indicate that direct horizontal well fracturing produces short, wide fractures, whereas roof-strata horizontal well fracturing generates longer, more effective fractures, primarily due to large-scale depressurization and induced fracturing associated with horizontal well drilling and staged fracturing.
Jiang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.