With the continuous development of drilling and reservoir stimulation technologies, the drilling depth of enhanced geothermal system projects is getting deeper and deeper, and the surrounding rock stress of dry hot rock reservoirs is also increasing. Therefore, it has become an inevitable demand for geothermal exploitation to study the evolution law of fracture seepage characteristics of granite under high temperature and ultra-high pressure. To reveal the evolutionary patterns of seepage characteristics in deep-seated hot dry rock fractures, an independently developed ultra-high pressure rock triaxial mechanical testing system was employed to investigate the seepage characteristics of fractured granite under varying temperatures (25–150 °C) and triaxial stresses (50–100 MPa). The study explores the influence of temperature on the seepage characteristics of granite fractures under ultra-high triaxial stress conditions. The results indicate that: (1) In the temperature range of 25–125 °C, as the rock temperature increases, the permeability of the Specimens showed a continuously decreasing trend due to the effect of thermal expansion. (2) In the temperature range of 125–150 °C, as the rock temperature increases, the permeability continues to decrease under low triaxial stress (50 MPa). However, under high triaxial stress (75 MPa) and extremely high triaxial stress (100 MPa), the permeability shows a slight increase instead. This phenomenon is attributed to free surface dissolution. (3) Quantitative analysis of the mesoscopic morphological data of the rock fracture surfaces after testing, combined with SEM images from scanning electron microscopy, confirms that within the high-temperature range of 125–150 °C, the differing levels of triaxial stress determine the variation in the dominant mechanism governing the evolution of the Specimen fracture surfaces, which in turn leads to the divergence in the trend of their permeability changes.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Zhang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896676c1944d70ce07d10 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/app16073606
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context:
Zimin Zhang
Zijun Feng
Peihua Jin
Applied Sciences
Taiyuan University of Technology
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...