With the development of unconventional oil and gas resources (such as shale gas and tight oil/gas), the widespread application of multistage fracturing technology has significantly increased the difficulty of wellbore integrity maintaining. The cement sheath serves as the core barrier for preserving wellbore integrity, particularly at the first interface (cement–casing) and the second interface (cement–formation). The high temperature, high pressure, and cyclic dynamic loading imposed by multistage fracturing represent severe challenges to the integrity of cement sheath. To simulate underground conditions realistically, a high-temperature, complex stress path loading system coupled with real-time gas flow monitoring was developed. Using this system, gas leakage monitoring and displacement-controlled cyclic loading tests were conducted on cement–steel (simulating the first interface) and cement–shale (simulating the second interface) composite specimens. It focused on investigating the effects of different temperatures, cyclic stress levels, and cycle counts on the sealing performance of the cement–steel and cement–shale composites. The findings reveal that elevated temperatures significantly degrade cement properties and accelerate damage accumulation. Cyclic stress levels and cycle counts are core drivers of interface fatigue failure, exhibiting synergistic destructive effects with temperature. The first interface is more prone to seal failure due to material property differences and a relatively high stress level. This research elucidates the cumulative damage mechanism underlying interfacial seal failure. It is of significant engineering implications for enhancing well safety and development efficiency.
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Qiqi Ying
Lei Wang (6656)
Zhenhui Bi
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Ying et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a67eebf353c071a6f0a8f9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14050805