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I am yet to come across Homogeneous Sedimentary Rocks.
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Might be, but Sedimentary Rock is no ordinary material and is typically a non-linear elastic material with significant anisotropy. Also note that the bedding planes were only typically deposited nearly horizintal, but a rock formation a few thousand metres deep is highly likely extensively folded and with member legs dipping and striking at acute values.
Now we're getting into mere quibbles, I think. Homogeneity lies in the eye of the beholder, a question of both scale and degree. By "vertical" I mean the nonspecific convention of "across the bedding planes", not "closely aligned with gravity"; apologies for forgetting that such convention useful and familiar to oilfield folk is less so for real people (similarly, "bedding planes" were the surfaces on which sediments that now form the rock were deposited, not geometrically flat nor even horizontal surfaces then nor now)
That said, I can assure you that hydraulic fractures (generally, at sufficient depth 3000+') don't follow bedding planes because the rock breaks across the planes before enough pressure can be developed to break along the planes. For most reservoirs, bedding planes are more or less horizontal. To open a more-or-less horizontal fracture, all the overburden weight would have to be carried by fluid pressure in the fracture. The required pressure would be a bit more than 1 psi per foot of depth. Fracture initiation and propagation is easy enough to detect by monitoring pressure while pumping the job. Measured "frac gradients" comfortably below 1 psi/ft (commonly near 0.7 psi/ft) confirm that the hydraulically induced fractures are much more vertical than horizontal.
Ah, you work with pilings and such? Presumably at depths the oil patch would call "piddlingly shallow"? Shallower than about 2000', the overburden stress may be low enough that the tensile strength and compressibility of the rock resists fracturing until the pressure rises high enough to lift the world above. "Horizontal" fractures, quite probably along bedding plane weakness, are more likely at shallow depths.
In fact, if a deep frac job were to create a "vertical" fracture that propagated way up toward the surface, at some point it will reach the crossover point where overburden stress falls lower than tensile strength; the fracture would "roll over" and propagate more "horizontally".
somehow it seems that not everyone looking into the whole fracking situation comprehends this.
I agree there seems to be an awful lot of that. It's why I posted this high-level handwave.
With your knowledge and experience, could you fill me in about the typical control measures employed during such an operation ? Are there any monitoring wells surrounding the production well provided for sampling, testing and monitoring ?
OK, now we're getting into implementation details. I'm not the guy and this ain't the place for quantitative specifics, but with that disclaimer I can offer handwaving generalities better than the average non-oilfield-trash bear:
During the well drilling, casing, cementing, and completion operations there are many routine tests and measures to confirm whether the casing is well cemented into the hole. The hole gets measured by caliper logs to determine its volume (local rock properties may make it less round or bigger or even smaller than the bit) and look for problem areas. While drilling, mud volumes pumped in and returned out of the well are monitored to detect zones of fluid entry or loss that could be a problem later (and for warning if the mud tries to drain away or climb out to let the well burn down the rig). The volume of cement pumped is carefully measured (often counting individual pump plunger strokes) to know how far it's displaced and much of the hole it *should*. Various logging tools then measure how much of the hole it *did* cover (a simple temperature log can pinpoint TOC "Top Of Cement" from the heat it evolves while setting) and how well it fills the space between the casing and the hole (these are more complex electronic sensing tools, e.g. the CBL: Cement Bond Log). If it don't look right, now is the time to fix it or adapt later operations (and hopes for the well) to its limitations.
During pretty much any operation involving pumping into the well,
especially during cementing and stimulation operations, pressures are monitored on all the tubing and casing strings and the annuli (annuluses?) between. Temperature differences will impose some slight pressure changes, but at the high rates and pressures involved in a frac job a major isolation failure will be glaringly obvious: a large pressure spike correlated across the pipes/annuli and rate changes or even by crushing the inner pipes into steel junk you'll have no end of fun and expense fishing out of the hole. (I am personally aware of one such case where the collapsed casing was recovered by "washing over" [drilling with a ring-shaped bit to recover the "fish" inside the pipe, like a core]... several joints of 5.5" casing were collapsed small enough to recover inside 4.5" washover pipe.) To ensure you *will* clean up any such mess, you didn't get a permit to drill the well until you posted a bond or other financial surety to get that done.
As to monitoring where the actual fracture goes if the well doesn't break, there's not much you can do (that I can talk about... maybe somebody with more confidence in his ethical position and knowledge of microseismic techology will chip in). Detailed logs of rates and pressures are recorded during the frac job, from which analyses beyond my expertise can glean much information about the fracture geometry, well integrity, and who to blame if something went wrong.
Monitoring wells aren't generally employed to monitor hydraulic fracture stimulations; there's simply no reason to believe they can reveal anything that won't be far more obvious otherwise. Again, stimulation operations aren't particularly relevant to more subtle communication issues through the wellbore. Redundant "surface" casing strings, cement, and annulus monitoring pretty much serve the function of monitoring wells, especially since the wellbore itself is by far the most vulnerable path from the completion to the surface.
Sealing the well, do they only use cementicious grout to seal, or does it get a bentonite plug isolating the strata of concern with a cementicious seal above it ?
Oilwell cements aren't your grandpa's Portland cement (well, that is sometimes used for shallow "conductor" and "surface" pipes). There are numerous special formulations for the unique range of conditions and operations involved in getting it mixed, pumped, and set in a well. That's a study of its own; it's what made HOWCO rich (Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Operators) and why they had the big pumps and blenders that proved to be useful for stimulation operations.
I'm out of my league here, but the purpose of oilwell cement isn't primarily structural (except for surface conductor pipes), but to seal the annulus outside the casing. I'm sure there are structural benefits, but I think establishing the hydraulic seal you need pretty much guarantees all the structural support you could want.
REALLY old wells have used other stuff to seal casings and plug holes (I've worked with pre-WWI wells with casings seated into lead wool and pre-WWII wells plugged with wood [better than you might think, and a royal bitch to get through if you want to re-enter the well]), but cement is the modern gold standard (with various mechanical plugs and additives that may provide sealing benefits). Crosslinked polymers, plastics, and various oilfield snakeoils
du juor are sometimes used in specialized cases, but "never" without cement.
Are there any systems installed in the cementicious seal that allows re-injection of grout for repairs ? In complex piling designs, I have included cast-in ducts, post-fitted with packers to enable a high pressure grouting opperation, for this specific reason.
Systems for re-cementing are "never" installed
a priori; cementing is tricky enough without putting tools in your way that you expect never to need and could fail on their own... or spoil a cement job that would've been perfect if the recementing tool hadn't been in the way.
The typical remediation for isolation failure or casing leak or inadequate primary cementing is a "squeeze job": The casing near (and/or above and/or below) the point of failure is perforated (much like for the production zone) and cement is pumped in forcibly, usually to the point that it packs tightly in the annulus and against the borehole and sets firmly as pressure squeezes out excess water. That can be tricky; if you don't pump hard enough you won't push cement or pack it firmly enough where it needs to go, if you pump too hard you can make a new fracture that can leak around the tip where it's too narrow to push cement particles, or the pressure you apply can get around behind some outer casing and make it collapse. Sometimes it's better to cut out the casing entirely, run a new string and do the primary cementing operation againr from scratch. Or if the well can't pay back that effort and expense, take your ball and go home:
The ultimate fallback remediation is to plug and abandon the well: pull as much stuff as you can out of the hole and pack it with cement and mechanical plugs, to standards defined by numerous regulatory authorities as well as sensible self-interest. The plugging bond you established before drilling pays for that if you go bankrupt or die or disappear before then.
Assuming you don't vanish from the earth somehow, your liability for the borehole never goes away. If a well you thought you plugged decades ago starts leaking, you'll have to come back to deal with it and clean up the mess. Even if you sold it off to somebody else, you'll be on the hook to get it done if he doesn't. If you're not an idiot, you'll do your damnedest to get it right the first time or screen prospective buyers for idiocy.