Non-Hertzian Stress Fields in Simulated Porous Sandstone Grains and Implications for Compactive Brittle Failure-A High-Resolution FEM Approach

Takahiro Shinohara*, Cedric Thieulot, Christopher J. Spiers, Suzanne J. T. Hangx

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Fluid extraction from sandstone reservoirs leads to reservoir compaction, potentially inducing surface subsidence and seismicity, as observed in the Groningen Gas Field, Netherlands. Such compaction is partly elastic, but can additionally be caused by instantaneous plastic and rate/time-dependent processes, such as subcritical crack growth, meaning that compaction may continue even if production is stopped. Despite the need to evaluate the impact of post-abandonment reservoir behavior ((Formula presented.) 10–100 years), few mechanism-based, rate/time-dependent compaction laws exist. Compaction due to grain breakage, either via critical or subcritical crack growth, is driven by tensile stresses acting on surface and volume flaws. We performed high-resolution 3D linear elastic finite element method simulations on simplified grain assemblies to investigate the effect of stress–strain boundary conditions, porosity and mineralogical variations on grain-scale stress fields. Our simulations showed tensile stress concentrations at grain contact edges and on pore walls, which increased in magnitude with increasing aggregate porosity and local porosity variation. The fraction of surface area with tensile stresses sufficient to extend flaws with a size up to (Formula presented.) showed a clear correlation with compactive yield envelopes for the Groningen reservoir sandstone. This suggests that compactive failure is related to the probability of pre-existing surface flaws, falling in a pore surface region where the Griffith criterion is satisfied. A preliminary, time-independent failure probability model, using the observed tensile stress distribution, qualitatively predicts a non-linear increase in grain cracking during deviatoric loading, and suggests a new route to predict sandstone compaction through brittle grain failure.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2024JB030818
Number of pages18
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume130
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s).

Keywords

  • Crack growth
  • Finite element modeling
  • Grain scale stress field
  • Local porosity variation
  • Porous sandstone compaction
  • Probability-type sandstone failure model

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