Hydraulic Fracturing: Modeling, Simulation, and Experiment
Videos from BIRS Workshop
Sau-Wai Wong, National University of Singapore
Monday Jun 4, 2018 09:05 - 09:36
HYDRAULIC FRACTURE MODELING AND DESIGN - A PERSPECTIVE ON HOW THINGS HAVE CHANGED FROM CONVENTIONAL TO UNCONVENTIONAL RESERVOIRS
Robert Viesca, Tufts University
Monday Jun 4, 2018 11:06 - 11:42
Fluid-induced faulting
Andrew Bunger, University of Pittsburgh
Monday Jun 4, 2018 15:33 - 16:04
Swarm Theory Framework for Evaluating Suitability of Models for Predicting Simultaneous Growth of Multiple Hydraulic Fractures
Delal Gunaydin, University Of Pittsburgh
Monday Jun 4, 2018 16:06 - 16:31
Laboratory Experimentation on Simultaneous Propagation of Multiple Hydraulic Fractures
Innokentiy Protasov, University of Houston
Monday Jun 4, 2018 16:32 - 16:53
Modeling simultaneous growth of multiple pseudo-3D hydraulic fractures with a fixed mesh algorithm
Guanyi Lu, University of Pittsburgh
Monday Jun 4, 2018 16:55 - 17:35
Time-dependent hydraulic fracture initiation and propagation
John Napier, University of Pretoria
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 09:01 - 09:28
Simulation of hydraulic fracture propagation using unstructured triangular mesh elements
Thomasina Ball, Cambridge University
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 10:31 - 11:00
Static and dynamic fluid-driven fracturing of adhered elastica
Brice Lecampion, EPFL
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 11:02 - 11:32
Slickwater is not water
Dmitri Garagash, Dalhousie University
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 14:02 - 14:33
What good is Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics in Hydraulic Fracturing?
Alena Bessmertnykh, University of Houston
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 14:36 - 15:02
Effects of Herschel-Bulkley fluid rheology and proppant on the near tip region of a hydraulic fracture
Fatima-Ezzahra Moukhtari, EPFL
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 15:31 - 15:59
A semi-infinite hydraulic fracture driven by a shear thinning fluid
Zhiqiao Wang, China University of Geosciences -Beijing
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 16:00 - 16:30
The Tip Region of a Near-Surface Hydraulic Fracture
Gennady Mishuris, Aberystwyth University
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 16:35 - 17:08
The role of fluid induced shear traction on the surface of a hydraulically driven crack.
Will Steinhardt, Harvard University
Tuesday Jun 5, 2018 17:09 - 17:37
Hydraulic Fracture as a Sensitive Material Probe
Nancy Shengnan Chen, University of Calgary
Wednesday Jun 6, 2018 08:35 - 09:06
Optimization of Well Placement and Fracture Design for Multi-Well Pads in Unconventional Tight Reservoirs
Mary Wheeler, University of Texas at Austin
Wednesday Jun 6, 2018 09:07 - 09:35
Diffusive Fracture Network Representations in Tight Formations
Sanghyun Lee, Florida State University
Wednesday Jun 6, 2018 09:36 - 10:09
Phase field modeling for fracture propagation in porous medium
Erwan Tanne, University of British Columbia
Wednesday Jun 6, 2018 10:35 - 11:00
A variational phase field model of hydraulic fracturing
Keita Yoshioka, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
Wednesday Jun 6, 2018 11:01 - 11:32
A phase-field hydromechanical model of reservoir simulation
Thomas-Peter Fries, Graz University of Technology
Thursday Jun 7, 2018 09:03 - 09:36
Explicit-implicit XFEM for Hydraulic Fracturing with emphasis on transport models on curved crack surfaces
Erfan Sarvaramini, U of Waterloo
Thursday Jun 7, 2018 11:08 - 11:44
3D Simulation of Stimulated Rock Volume Evolution during Hydraulic Fracturing
Anthony Peirce, University of British Columbia
Thursday Jun 7, 2018 13:32 - 13:57
Monitoring Evolving Hydraulic Fracture Growth using Tiltmeters and a combined Extended Kalman Filter-Implicit Level Set Algorithm
Emmanuel Detournay, University of Minnesota
Thursday Jun 7, 2018 14:02 - 14:36
Hydraulic Fracture in Highly Permeable Rock
Denis Esipov, Institute of Computational Technologies SB RAS
Thursday Jun 7, 2018 14:38 - 15:11
The fully coupled 3D numerical model of hydraulic fracturing: ways to improve and possible applications
Sergey Golovin, Lavrentyev Institute of Hydrodynamics
Thursday Jun 7, 2018 15:32 - 16:04
Modelling of a planar hydraulic fracture with three different approaches