Impact of Rock Plasticity on Hydraulic Fracture Propagation and Closure

We performed scaled laboratory experiments of hydraulic fracture propagation and closure in soft artificial rock and outcrop rock samples. We also performed numerical simulations of the fracture behavior in plastic rockswith independently measured rock properties. The simulations aided in interpreting the measurements and extrapolating the results to field scale. Compared with elastic rock, plasticity induces a larger width for a given net pressure. However, the pressure to propagate fractures is only marginally increased and, in the case of the laboratory tests, was actually lower than expected from elastic behavior. The most dramatic effect of plasticity is that closure is much lower than the confining stress because of strong stress redistribution along the fracture.