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Excerpt from the Proceedings of the COMSOL Conference 2008 Boston

Fully Coupled Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical Modeling by COMSOL


Multiphysics, with Applications in Reservoir Geomechanical
Characterization
Tony T. Freeman*,1, Rick J. Chalaturnyk1, Igor I. Bogdanov2
1
2

University of Alberta, Canada


Centre Huile Lourde Ouvert et Exprimental (CHLOE), France

*Corresponding author: #2102- 8515- 112 Street- T6G1K7, Edmonton, Canada


Tel. +1(780)492-7244 E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract: In recent years, there has been a


fundamental shift in the way researchers were
looking at geomechanical and porous media.
Because of the complex nature of geomaterials
and presence of solid and fluid within a single
system it is crucial to consider all the physics
involved within the geomaterial system. As part
of this research a fully coupled thermo-hydromechanical model based on COMSOLs built-in
application modes and PDE application mode is
developed. The model consists of a three-phase
flow model designed as a set of coupled PDE
application modes that when coupled with Heat
Transfer Module and Structural Module, forms a
thermo-hydro-mechanical model. The coupled
application modes entail their own relevant
boundary conditions depending on the analysis.
A Transient elasto-plastic analysis from
Structural Module along with necessary
formulation is implemented to define the
appropriate yield criteria for the shear and tensile
failure of the rock. To account for inherent
heterogeneity in rock properties, a probabilistic
distribution of mechanical and hydraulic
properties through external script and
interpolation functions available in COMSOL is
used. The integrated non-isothermal flow and
geomechanical analysis, using the powerful
COMSOL multiphysics interface, yields
astonishing results indicating the importance of
geomechanics
in
petroleum
engineering
problems. The results from the analyses
demonstrate the impact of geomechanical
properties on multiphase flow behavior and vice
versa.
Keywords: Thermo-hydro-mechanical coupling,
Geomechanics,
Reservoir
simulation,
poroelasticity, multiphase flow

1. Introduction
The goal of geomechanical reservoir
characterization is to describe the role of
geomechanics on the whole reservoir
characterization and to predict reservoir behavior
under varying conditions of stresses and strains
during
various
stages
of
exploration,
development, production and completion. The
purpose of this project is to explore the
application of a new thermo-hydro-mechanical
model in the practical problems in major areas of
petroleum geomechanics.
As shown in Figure 1, stresses and strains in
a reservoir, have a two-way link with
temperature and flow of the fluid. Change in
temperature during, for instance thermal
recovery or hydraulic fracturing, would result in
the development of thermal stresses in the
porous material and the generated stresses can
cause a failure in the reservoir rock and
consequently altering its porosity, permeability,
and thermal properties. This will not only
progressively change the strength of the rock, but
also will cause changes in the flow regime and
rate. Fluid flow will also be affected by
temperature variations directly through the
change in the viscosity of the hydrocarbon. The
flow of fluid in the pores of rock, on the other
hand, can impact the effective stresses in the
rock through the fluids pressure. The effect will
be more noticeable if the reduced effective
stresses combined with thermal loads yield the
rock and stimulate the existing discontinuities or
cause abnormal porosities.

pressure on overall behaviour of rock matrix


drives the requirement for considering other
physics in mechanical analysis of a geomaterial
system. In the scope of petroleum geomechanics,
the most important physics to be simultaneously
included in geomechanical modeling are fluid
flow and heat transfer.
The fundamental equation for mechanical
physics is the force equilibrium equation:
.
Figure 1. A thermo-hydro-mechanical flowchart

Therefore, it is critically important that for


any petroleum geomechanical analysis such as
well stability, reservoir subsidence or reservoir
simulation,
a
coupled
thermo-flowgeomechanical approach to be implemented. The
most common approach to conduct this complex
coupling simulation is a partially (loosely)
coupled approach in which thermal flow and
geomechanical analysis are conducted in
separate simulators and the results are passed
between them for each time step. However, with
strong multiphysics capability in COMSOL, a
fully coupled approach can be implemented to
solve all set of equations for thermal,
mechanical, and single/multiphase flow in the
same simulator (COMSOL). In addition to fully
coupled capability, COMSOL provides the
advantage of access to other application modes
such as electrical heating as well as general PDE
application for flexible coupling of desired
additional physics.

Where, s is the total stress tensor and F is


the external or body force.
The flow of fluid in the pores of rock can
impact the stresses and strains in the rock
through the fluids pressure. This impact is best
demonstrated and implemented by decomposing
the stress tensor into effective stress s and pore
pressure p.

p Eq. 2

For the general case of three-phase flow, the


concept of effective stress can be defined based
on an average pore pressure:
p

S p

S p

S p

Eq. 3

p Eq. 4

Where the parameter a is called Biot-Willis


coefficient.
By implementing the pore pressure into the
mechanical equilibrium equation we will obtain:

2. Governing Equations
Geomechanics, if defined as the mechanics
of geomaterials, is in essence a multidisciplinary
field of engineering. This is mostly because of
the complex nature of geomaterials and the
presence of multiple constituent in a
heterogeneous system under various conditions
of stress, temperature and flow history.
Coexistence of solid and fluid within a single
matrix with one ingredient (fluid) capable of
moving or undergoing pressures different from
solid phase and significant effect of fluid

F Eq. 1

I p

Eq. 5

Flow of fluids in a reservoir can be single


phase or multiphase. For single phase flow, two
modes of fluid flow can be considered, Darcy
and Brinkman. According to Darcys empirical
law (later derived mathematically from Stokes
equations), the flow velocity is linearly
proportional to pressure gradient.
u

g z

Eq. 6

Where, m is the dynamic viscosity of the


fluid and k is the permeability of the rock matrix.
Brinkman equations on the other hand,
describe fast-moving fluids in porous media.
They indeed interpolate between the Navierstokes equation and Darcys law [1]:
u

.u

For the case of a single phase flow of a


slightly compressible fluid in a compressible
rock, Darcys law can be used to derive the
following transient parabolic equation:
p

g z

q Eq. 9

Where, Ct represents the total compressibility


(rock and fluid).
Pore pressure from fluid flow can affect the
stress state in the porous media. On the other
hand, geomechanical deformations, can affect
the fluid flow through the porous media. This
hydro-mechanical coupling can in general be
formulated according to poroelasticity theory as
follows:
G

Eq. 8

For multiphase flow, various conditions of


two phase and three phase flow can occur in the
reservoir. Basic equations for two phase (water
and oil) flow are:
. u

0 Eq. 7

porosities. This could happen during a thermal


recovery process.

Eq. 10
.

Eq. 11

Where M, Biots Modulus is defined as:


Eq. 12
Kf is the bulk modulus of the fluid and Ks is
the bulk modulus of the solid. Mechanical
deformation can also impact the fluid flow
behavior within the rock by changing the
permeability k. The change will be more obvious
if the stresses caused by a combination of
structural, flow, and thermal loads yield the rock
and create discontinuities, fractures or abnormal

q ,

g z ,

1 Eq. 15

p Eq. 16

w, o Eq. 13
w, o

Eq. 14

For the case of modeling thermal recovery by


steam, a three-phase (steam, water, oil) , two
component (water and oil) flow is used. the
water and steam in such a model constitute a
single component with mass exchange between
them and with no mass exchange between steam
(gas) or water with oil (bitumen) component.
Thus, the equation of conservation of mass for
the water can be given as:
S

. u

u
Eq. 17

In an engineering model of a reservoir rock


containing heavy oil or bitumen, temperature is a
very important component of the system. Both
rock and bitumen properties are strongly affected
by heat. The transfer of heat, on the other hand,
is influenced by other physics such as flow of a
fluid through a material. This two-way coupling
mechanism
requires
understanding
and
implementing the thermal energy and heat
transfer in a geomechanical model through a
multiphysics simulation.
Heat energy can transfers from one point to
another in a porous media due to a difference in
temperature by conduction, convection, or both.
Conduction can occur in stationary solid or
liquid by a temperature gradient through
diffusion. Convection or the transfer of heat by a
moving fluid can take place only in fluids or
gases. In a porous rock as a material consisting
of both solid and liquid the thermal energy can

transfer by both mechanisms of conduction and


convection.
According to Fouriers law the heat flows
from regions of high temperature to regions of
low temperature according to the following
equation:
q

k T

Eq. 18

Where, k is the thermal conductivity of the


media. By combining Fouriers law and energy
conservation law, the heat transfer through
conduction can be represented in the following
mathematical form, called heat equation:

CT

. kT T

Q Eq. 19

Where r is the density, CT is the heat


capacity, kT is the thermal conductivity, and Q is
the heat source or sink.
In the case of heat transfer by convection and
conduction, a convective term indicating the heat
transfer through convective velocity u must be
added to the equations above:
q
CT

k T
T

CuT
. kT T

Eq. 20
CuT

Eq. 21

Materials change volume with temperature


causing thermal strains to develop in the
materials. If the material cannot freely deform in
response to the volume change, thermal stresses
will develop in the material depending on the
thermal expansion capacity, modulus of
elasticity and the degree of constraint. Therefore,
in a mechanical system under structural loads
with varying temperatures the total stress will be
the combination of structural and thermal
stresses. For an elastic material, we will have:

T T

Eq. 22

Where T is the thermal expansion


coefficient and D is the elasticity matrix.
The stresses generated by thermal energy can
cause a failure in rock structure and consequently

change the porosity and permeability. This will


not only progressively change the strength of
rock, will cause changes in the flow regime and
rate. Fluid flow will also be affected by
temperature variations directly. The viscosity of
a fluid is an indication of its resistance to flow or
deform itself. Temperature is by far the most
important variable affecting viscosity and as a
result the resistance of fluid to flow. Fluid flow
on the other hand, can help transfer the heat
through convection according to the following
equation (u is the velocity from fluid flow):
C

. k T

CuT

Eq. 23

In a petroleum engineering context, flow in a


porous media can be isothermal (flow to a well)
or non-isothermal (thermal recovery). The basis
for non-isothermal flow formulation is the
conservation of energy law. Using this law, the
following energy equation for a general threephase flow can be obtained:

S U

u H

. kT T

CT
0

Eq. 24

Where, Ua is the specific internal energy per


unit mass of phase a, Cs is the specific heat
capacity of the solid, Ha is the enthalpy of the a
phase, and kT is the thermal conductivity.
In addition, to account for the change in porosity
and permeability as a result of volumetric strains
developed in the rock by temperature and
pressure, the following equations are used in the
models:

Eq. 25

Eq. 26
being the volumetric strain, the first
With
equation is from reference [1] and the second
equation is from reference [4] and [5].

3. Examples and Verification


The examples provided in this section serve
two purposes, first to demonstrate the application
of the poroelastic, single-phase and two-phase
hydro-mechanical model and second, to verify
the results obtained from the model by
comparison to analytical and numerical solution
available in literature.
3.1 Uniaxial Single-phase Hydro-mechanical
Model

Table 1. Poroelastic and fluid flow parameters for the


first example [2]

Young's Modulus
Poisson's Ratio
Biot's Coefficient,
Biots modulus(M )

Rock Density
Oil Density
Porosity
Permeability
Kinematic Viscosity

1.44104 MPa
0.2
0.79
1.23104 MPa
2000 kg/m3
940 kg/m3
0.2
210-13 m2
1.310-4 m2/s

The first example by Zheng et al [2] is a 2D


rock sample 2m x 3m (Figure 2. undergoing a
uniaxial compression. The rock is fully saturated
with oil and the fluid can only flow through the
top boundary. Confined by roller constraints at
bottom and sides, a 4 MPa uniform load is
applied on the top boundary.
A coupled hydro-mechanical analysis was
conducted through transient pressure analysis
from Darcys law in Earth Science Module
coupled with transient elasto-plastic plain strain
analysis from Structural Module. To match the
results from source, no change in porosity or
permeability was taken into account in the
analysis.
The sample configuration is shown in Figure
2 and the input parameters are given in Table 1.
The governing equations for coupling
mechanical and hydraulical equations were Eq.
10 and Eq. 11. Some modifications in storage
term of the transient flow formulation were
necessary to make it compatible with Biots
modulus in Eq. 11.

No flow
Boundary

Figure 2. A saturated rock sample undergoing


uniaxial compression

The vertical displacement of the top of the


sample after 1 minute and 10 minutes is shown
in Figure 4 . As it can be seen from this figure,
the results are perfectly matched with the work
done by Zheng et al [2]. Also the effective stress
in the sample directly obtained from hydromechanical analysis is shown in Figure 5 and as
it can be seen from the chart, the effective stress
approaches the applied load as water pressure in
the sample dissipates.
Figure 3. Upward water flux due to mechanical
deformation.

plastic plain strain analysis from Structural


Module. The coupling mechanical and
hydraulical properties are based on Eq. 10 and
Eq. 11 with appropriate modification in
compressibility terms. The change in porosity
during the simulation as a result of mechanical
strains is calculated based on Eq. 25. Although,
the original analysis by Mainguy and
Longuemare [1] is based on a coupled 1D flow
coupled with geomechanics the current study is
based on 2D flow and stress analysis.
Nonetheless, the oil production results for both
reservoir simulation and fully coupled method
(Figure 8 and Figure 9) are very close to their
results.
Figure 4. Vertical displacements along the sample at
different times after loading

Figure 5. Effective stress along the sample at different


times after loading directly from fully coupled hydromechanical model.

3.2 Water Flooding


Mechanical Model

Two-Phase

Table 2. Mechanical and fluid flow parameters for


the second example [1]
Oil viscosity
Water viscosity
Intrinsic permeability
Initial porosity
Initial oil density
Initial water density
Water compressibility
Oil compressibility
Water top influx
Drained elastic modulus
Poissons ratio
Drained bulk modulus
Rock shear modulus
Biots coefficient
Total displacement
Relative permeability of water
Relative permeability of oil

0.500 Pas
0.001 Pas
5x1014 m2
0.30
950 kgm3
1000 kgm3
4 x 1010 Pa1
0.000 Pa1
0.02 kgm2s1
3 x 109 Pa
0.3
2.5 x 109 Pa
1.15 x 109 Pa
1
0.000 m
Sw2
Sh2

Hydro-

The second example by Mainguy et al [1] is a


cylindrical rock sample 1.5m length and 0.5m
diameter (Figure 2. undergoing a water flood
test. The rock is originally saturated with oil and
while confined by roller constraints on all sides a
constant water influx is imposed at the top. The
input parameters are given in Table 1 and the
sample configuration is shown in Figure 6.
The hydro-mechanical model for this
example is a set of PDE application modes for
two-phase flow coupled with transient elasto-

Water influx

0.5m
Oil-saturated Rock

1.5m

Figure 6. A confined oil-saturated rock sample subject


to constant water influx on one side

Figure 10. Porosity in the sample 30, 60 and 120


minutes after water injection from fully coupled
COMSOL model.
Figure 7. Oil saturation in the sample two hours after
water flooding

Figure 8. Comparison of oil production from reservoir


simulation model , Mainguy & longuemare and
COMSOL

Figure 9. Comparison of oil production from fully


coupled model , Mainguy & longuemare and
COMSOL

Figure 11. Pressure in the sample 5, 15 and 30


minutes after water injection from fully coupled
COMSOL model.

Figure 12. Water saturation in the sample 5, 15 and 30


minutes after water injection from fully coupled
COMSOL model.

4. Practical Reservoir Geomechanical


Applications
By
implementing
the
thermo-hydromechanical model developed in COMSOL,
geomechanics of three major petroleum
engineering problems; surface subsidence, fluid
injection for hydraulic fracturing, and steam
injection for SAGD thermal recovery are
explored in this section. The impact of
geomechanics through various coupling links
and their impact on non-isothermal single phase
and two phase flow pattern are explored. In
addition, change in porosity and permeability as
a result of mechanical strains is considered. Only
poroelastic behaviour is implemented within this
paper and elasto-plastic (poroplastic) behavior
will be covered in future publications. Also, the
models can be analyzed based on a stochastic set
of input parameters to account for heterogeneity.

input parameters are given in Table 3 and the


output is presented in Figure 13 and Figure 14.
Table 3. Mechanical and fluid flow parameters for
surface subsidence
Oil viscosity
Reservoir permeability
Overlying layers Permeability
Initial porosity
Oil density
Rock density
Production rate
Elastic modulus
Poissons ratio
Biots modulus (M )
Biots coefficient

0.1 Pas
5x1013 m2
5x1014 m2
0.23
970 kgm3
2000 kgm3
0.005 m/h1
1 x 1010 Pa
0.25
1.3 x 1010 Pa
0.85

4.1 Surface Subsidence


Total external stress over a rock element
underground is carried partly by the solid
framework of the solid and partly by the fluid in
the pores of the rock. This means, overburden
pressure is supported by both rock matrix and
pore fluid pressure. Mathematically this can be
demonstrated by introduction of effective stress
(s) in the p Eq. 4 ( p )
During production the fluid is removed from
the pores, reducing p and consequently the share
of pore fluid from the total overburden pressure.
This forces the rock framework to have to carry
more load. More load on rock matrix causes
compression
strains
and
consequently
compaction of the reservoir. The compaction of
the reservoir can result in the subsidence of the
ground surface above the reservoir formation. In
addition to the problem that may be caused for
the amenities on the surface, compaction can
impact the wellbore integrity and result in
problems for drilling and production equipment.
In order to evaluate the likelihood and
amount of subsidence, a fully coupled hydromechanical model based on theory of
poroelasticity and transient single-phase flow
(Eq. 10 and Eq. 11) is used to demonstrate the
scenario. The poroelastic and fluido-dynamical

Figure 13. Surface subsidence as a result of oil


production from a reservoir

Figure 14. Surface subsidence 2, 3, and 4 hours after


production

4.2 Non-isothermal Fluid Injection into a well


Non-isothermal fluid injection into a well is a
thermo-hydro-mechanical process that could
happen during for instance hydraulic fracturing
projects or enhanced oil recovery methods. The
injection could be single phase if the formation is
dry or saturated with the same liquid or twophase if the formation is saturated with another
immiscible fluid. The capability of COMSOL in
thermo-hydro-mechanical modeling of both
cases is discussed in this section.
i) Single-phase thermal fluid injection

Figure 15. Temperature distribution and wellbore


deformation 40 s after water injection

By coupling transient Darcys flow,


Convection & conduction, and structural
mechanics, it is possible to build a thermal fluid
injection model for a deformable rock. The input
data for this model is presented in Table 4 and
some output from the model is shown in Figure
16 and Figure 18. It should be mentioned that
only an elastic behavior is considered in this
exampled and possible failure and elasto-plastic
behavior is not taken into account.
Table 4. Input data for single phase fluid thermal fluid
injection
Permeability
Injection Pressure
Initial porosity
Initial fluid density
Rock density
Elastic modulus
Poissons ratio
Biots modulus (M )
Biots coefficient
Vertical in-situ stress
Horizontal in-situ stress (Max)
Horizontal in-situ stress (Min)
Original temperature
Injection temperature
Viscosity: initial temperature
Viscosity: injection temperature
Heat Capacity
Thermal expansion coefficient
Thermal conductivity
Well radius

5x1013 m2
5 x 107 Pa
0.23
980 kgm3
2800 kgm3
3 x 109 Pa
0.25
1.3 x 1010 Pa
0.85
5.9 x 106 Pa
6.11 x 106 Pa
4.89 x 106 Pa
293 K
283 K
1.03x10-3 Pas
1.34x10-3 Pas

Figure 16. Permeability and porosity change as a


function of volumetric strain

1140-1160J/kg/K

6.64x10-6 /K
2.63 W/m/K
0.1 m

Figure 17. Tangential stress around the wellbore for


isothermal and non-isothermal fluid injection

ii) Two-phase thermal fluid injection


The verified two-phase hydro-mechanical
model introduced in water flooding example
(section 3.2) can be transformed into a THM
model to simulate the injection of water into an
oil saturated reservoir. The coupling mechanical
and hydraulic properties are based on Eq. 10 and
Eq. 11 with appropriate modification in
compressibility terms. The change in porosity
and permeability during the simulation as a
result of mechanical strains is accounted for
using Eq. 25 and Eq. 26.
The example presented here is the injection
of water with constant rate into an oil saturated
reservoir. The model can be developed further to
simulate the hydraulic fracturing in the reservoir.
A summary of the input parameters used in this
example are shown in Table 5. Figure 18 to
Figure 20 show some of the results obtained
from this practical example.

Figure 18. Saturation of injection fluid (water) into


an oil saturated reservoir 45min after injection

Table 5. Input data for two phase fluid injection


Initial Permeability
Injection flux
Initial porosity
Initial oil density
Initial water density
Rock density
Elastic modulus
Poissons ratio
Biots coefficient
Drained bulk modulus
Vertical in-situ stress
Horizontal in-situ stress (Max)
Horizontal in-situ stress (Min)
Original temperature
Injection temperature
Initial Oil viscosity
Initial Water viscosity
Thermal expansion coefficient
Thermal conductivity
Relative permeability of water
Relative permeability of oil
Water compressibility
oil compressibility
Pore compressibility
Wellbore radius
Cohesion (C)
Friction angle
Yield criterion

5x1014 m2
0.02 kgm2s1
0. 3
950 kgm3
1000 kgm3
2400 kgm3
3 x 109 Pa
0.3
0.9
3 x 109 Pa
6 x 106 Pa
6.6 x 106 Pa
5.4 x 106 Pa
293 K
293 K
0.500 Pas
0.001 Pas
1x10-5 /K

Figure 19. Radial effective stress at different times


after injection

2.63 W/m/K
Sw2
Sh2

4 x 1010 Pa1
1 x 1010 Pa1
1 x 109 Pa1
0.1 m
5 x 105 Pa
30o
Drucker-Prager

Figure 20. Plastic zone based on Drucker-Prager


yield criterion 30min after injection

4.3 Steam Injection for Thermal Recovery


Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (SAGD) is
one of the best thermal recovery methods
originally developed for oil sands in Alberta. In
this method, two horizontal wells are drilled one
above the other. Hot steam is injected through
the top well into the reservoir to heat up the
bitumen and make it mobile. During a SAGD
process, stress state within the reservoir is
significantly altered due the thermal stresses and
steam pressure. As a result geomechanics
becomes an important part of SAGD process as
the new stress state can impact the multiphase
flow of steam and bitumen by enhanced
permeability or stimulated fractures.

Figure 21. Distribution of oil saturation 115 days


after injection

A multiphase flow for a SAGD process can


be modeled through a three-phase (steam, water,
oil) and two-component (water and oil)
formulations with mass transfer between steam
and water (Eq. 17 and see [12]). The example
model presented here illustrates the THM
modeling of steam injection into a reservoir. For
clearness, the production well is not modeled and
in-situ stresses are ignored. The input values for
the steam injection model is presented in Table 6
and typical results from the analysis are shown in
Figure 21 to Figure 23.
Table 6. Input data for steam injection model
Initial Permeability
Injection Pressure
Initial reservoir pressure
Initial porosity
Initial oil density
Initial water density
Rock density
Elastic modulus
Poissons ratio
Biots coefficient
Vertical in-situ stress
Horizontal in-situ stress (Max)
Horizontal in-situ stress (Min)
Original temperature
Injection temperature
Thermal expansion coefficient
Thermal conductivity
Water compressibility
oil compressibility
Pore compressibility

9.82x1013 m2
1.084 x 106 Pa
9.825 x 105 Pa
0. 32
1010 kgm3
1000 kgm3
2800 kgm3
1.4 x 109 Pa
0.3
1.0
0.0 Pa
0.0 Pa
0.0 Pa
273 K
436 K
1.2x10-5 /K

Figure 22. First principle stress distribution


generated by steam pressure and temperature

2.5 W/m/K

4 x 1010 Pa1
1 x 1010 Pa1
1 x 109 Pa1

Figure 23. Permeability change as a result of


volumetric strains

5. Conclusions
Fully coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical
modeling for single phase and multiphase flow is
successfully implemented in a number of
reservoir geomechanical problems through the
built-in and PDE application modes available in
COMSOL Multiphysics. The models are verified
by comparison to the numerical and analytical
solutions available in the literature. An integrated
non-isothermal flow and geomechanical analysis,
using the powerful COMSOL multiphysics
platform, yields astonishing results indicating the
importance of geomechanics in petroleum
engineering problems. The results from the
analyses
demonstrate
the
impact
of
geomechanical properties on single phase and
multiphase flow behavior and vice versa.

6. References
1. M. Mainguy, P. Longuemare, Coupling Fluid
flow and Rock Mechanics: Formulation of the
Partial Coupling between Reservoir and
Geomechanical Simulators, Oil & Gas Science
and Technology-Rev. IFP, Vol. 57(2002), No. 4,
pp. 355-367
2. Yibing Zheng, Robert Burridge and Daniel
Burns, Reservoir Simulation with the Finite
Element Method Using Biot Poroelastic
Approach, Earth Resources Laboratory, Dept. of
Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
3. L. Durlofski, J.F. Brady, Analysis of the
Brinkman Equation as a Model for Flow in
Porous Media, Phys. Fluids 30(11), November
1987
4. P. Li, R.J. Chalaturnyk, M. Polikar, Issues
With Reservoir Geomechanical Simulation of the
SAGD Process, Journal of Canadian Petroleum
Technology, Vol. 43, No. 1, pp. 1-11, 2004
5. W.S. Tortike, S.M. Farouq Ali, Reservoir
Simulation Integrated With Geomechanics,
Journal of Canadian Petroleum Technology,
Vol. 32, No. 5, pp. 28-37, 1993
6. R.J. Chalaturnyk, P. Li, When Is It Important
to
Consider
Geomechanics
in
SAGD
Operations? , Journal of Canadian Petroleum
Technology, Vol. 43, No. 4, pp. 1-8, 2004

7. P. Li, R.J. Chalaturnyk, T.B. Tan, Coupled


Reservoir Geomechanical Simulations for the
SAGD Process, Journal of Canadian Petroleum
Technology, Vol. 45, No. 1, pp. 33-40, 2006
8. Gang Han, Maurice B. Dusseault, Description
of Fluid Flow Around a Wellbore With StressDependent Porosity and permeability, Journal of
Petroleum Science and Engineering, Vol. 40, pp
1-16, 2003
9. T.H. Yang, L.C. Li, L.G. Tham, C.A. Tang,
Numerical Approach to Hydraulic Fracturing in
Heterogeneous and Permeable Rocks, Key
Engineering Materials, Vols. 243-244, pp 351356, 2003
10. S. Yin, M.B. Dusseault, L. Rothenburg,
Coupled Multiphase poroelastic Analysis of
Reservoir Depletion Including Surrounding
Strata, Int. Journal of Rock Mechanics & Mining
Sciences, Vol. 44, pp 758-766, 2007
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7. Acknowledgements
Part of this research is funded by a NSERC
PGS-D scholarship to Tony Freeman.

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