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项目编号: 1645246
项目名称:
Self-Organization Mechanisms within Magma-Driven Dyke and Hydraulic Fracture Swarms
作者: Andrew Bunger
承担单位: University of Pittsburgh
批准年: 2017
开始日期: 2017-01-01
结束日期: 2019-12-31
资助金额: 110861
资助来源: US-NSF
项目类别: Continuing grant
国家: US
语种: 英语
特色学科分类: Geosciences - Earth Sciences
英文关键词: fluid-filled crack ; fluid-filled ; swarm theory ; self-organization ; swarm ; hydraulic fracture ; physical mechanism ; industrial hydraulic fracture ; earth ; naturally-occurring dyke swarm ; crack swarm ; fluid-driven fracture swarm
英文摘要: Fluid-filled cracks are an important feature of the upper crust of the Earth, and the proposed work addresses how fluid-filled cracks interact with one another when several are emplaced closely in space and time. Specifically, most magmas are transported in cracks between the deep crust and volcanoes, thus an understanding of the mechanics of these bodies is important for volcanic processes on the Earth and other planets. Hydraulic fracturing has revolutionized the fossil fuel industry and is another example of fluid-filled cracks under pressure. The mechanics of interacting cracks will be examined by applying a novel method that has been developed in biology: swarm theory. The principal investigator will use three methods to tackle the problem. First, mathematical models will be developed. Second, computational models will examine the parameters that lead to the development of crack swarms. Third, analogue experiments, which use artificial materials at room temperature and pressure, will be applied to simulate the processes in the earth and verify the analytical and computational models. The method has the potential to influence the design of new methods that will influence the conditions by which hydrocarbon and geothermal reservoirs are exploited.

A new modeling paradigm is proposed that is based on swarm theory in order to clarify the mechanisms that lead to self-organization of fluid-filled cracks. The proposed research aims to clarify the origin of the alignment, repulsion, and attraction forces within fluid-filled cracks and to demonstrate how the interplay of these forces leads to emergent length scales that provide a lasting and measureable imprint of the mechanical conditions governing emplacement. Analytical, numerical, and analogue models will be developed to test the hypothesis that the mechanical conditions governing emplacement will be systematically expressed in the emergent geometry of the swarm, applying the results in order to infer emplacement conditions using measurements of spacing, length, and width for naturally-occurring dyke swarms and industrial hydraulic fractures. Observations of natural and manmade systems reveal substantial differences: hundreds of igneous dikes grow together as swarms, but hydraulic fractures tend to localize to 1 or 2 dominant strands. This paradox presents a unique opportunity to understand the physical mechanisms that govern whether or not injection of fluid will result in a fluid-driven fracture swarm.
资源类型: 项目
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/90712
Appears in Collections:全球变化的国际研究计划
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Andrew Bunger. Self-Organization Mechanisms within Magma-Driven Dyke and Hydraulic Fracture Swarms. 2017-01-01.
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