2022 EJRNL PP M.K. MEDETBEKOVA 1.pdf?
Terbatas  Suharsiyah
» Gedung UPT Perpustakaan
Terbatas  Suharsiyah
» Gedung UPT Perpustakaan
Fluid withdrawal and pore pressure reduction change the effective stresses around a borehole and cause
borehole instability associated with progressive localization of the damaged zone as well as potential fines
production. Experimentally, chalk exhibits a complex geomechanics behaviour (pore collapse, shear failure,
time/rate dependency) and modelling the behaviour of the borehole under in-situ and operational conditions
requires the constitutive model to be capable of capturing the observations. This study presents a workflow
that integrates rock mechanics testing on cylindrical specimens as well as specimen with a single lateral hole
(SLH) and a finite element code, developed for chalk. The code incorporates post-peak softening as well as the
rate dependency of the pore collapse stress in order to accurately predict the wellbore stability under in-situ
stress conditions. The tested SLH specimen was CT imaged before and after testing for identifying the damaged
zone and its extension. Backward numerical simulations of the SLH test data improved the accuracy of the
estimated rock mechanics properties (post-peak failure and dilatancy) compared to the properties estimated
by back analyses of standard triaxial tests with a single element simulator. The workflow is applied to predict
the stability of a small lateral borehole (2 cm) created with Radial Jet Drilling technique with two different
geometries: one with circular geometry created by a rotating nozzle; another with a circular hole with wing
shaped cracks likely to develop when a static nozzle is used. Results of the wellbore stability analyses applying
the chalk properties from the back analyses highlighted the importance of using experimentally verified postpeak
failure and dilatancy parameters, together with a modelling tool capable of simulating shear strain
localization incorporating the Cosserat approach.