
doi: 10.1007/bf00208956
The model of Snow, in which a fracture is represented by two parallel channel walls, has frequently been used to study the flow of fluid in fractured reservoirs. Although this model gives important insight into the flow in fractures, very few naturally occurring fractures have smooth parallel faces. In this paper, a simple model of partially contacting and en-echelon fractures frequently found in geological materials is presented. In this model, a fracture is viewed as a planar region where separation and contact zones both exist. To analyse the fluid flow in a porous medium containing fractures of this type, a planar array of periodically spaced fracture segments is analysed. The flow through a single fracture is deduced by taking the limit as the spacing between neighbouring fractures becomes large. The hydraulic conductivity parallel to the fractures is found to be the parallel combination of the conductivity of the porous matrix and the system of parallel fractures, the individual fracture conductance being a series combination of the hydraulic conductance of the separation and contact zones. This interpretation enables the conductance of the contact zones to be evaluated and the results to be generalised to the case in which the material in the contact regions has a hydraulic conductivity different to that of the matrix. This may arise, for example, from grain-size reduction during fracturing or may result from a partial mineralisation or cementation of the fracture.
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