On the numerical simulation of crack interaction in hydraulic fracturing
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1710333
DOI10.1007/s10596-017-9702-8zbMath1405.65126OpenAlexW2781228007MaRDI QIDQ1710333
E. W. Remij, D. M. J. Smeulders, Joris J. C. Remmers, Jacques M. Huyghe
Publication date: 22 January 2019
Published in: Computational Geosciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10596-017-9702-8
Brittle fracture (74R10) Soil and rock mechanics (74L10) Finite element, Rayleigh-Ritz and Galerkin methods for initial value and initial-boundary value problems involving PDEs (65M60)
Related Items
A dimensionally-reduced fracture flow model for poroelastic media with fluid entry resistance and fluid slip, Sampling-based stochastic analysis of the PKN model for hydraulic fracturing
Cites Work
- A large deformation formulation for fluid flow in a progressively fracturing porous material
- A numerical approach for arbitrary cracks in a fluid-saturated medium
- The simulation of dynamic crack propagation using the cohesive segments method
- Numerical simulations of fast crack growth in brittle solids
- The partition of unity finite element method: basic theory and applications
- Computational modelling of impact damage in brittle materials
- A cohesive segments method for the simulation of crack growth
- Phase-field modeling of a fluid-driven fracture in a poroelastic medium
- The enhanced local pressure model for the accurate analysis of fluid pressure driven fracture in porous materials
- A review of the XFEM-based approximation of flow in fractured porous media
- Pressure and fluid-driven fracture propagation in porous media using an adaptive finite element phase field model
- An extended finite element method for hydraulic fracture propagation in deformable porous media with the cohesive crack model
- A new method for modelling cohesive cracks using finite elements
- Modelling crack growth by level sets in the extended finite element method
- A reduced model for Darcy’s problem in networks of fractures
- Elastic crack growth in finite elements with minimal remeshing
- Arbitrary branched and intersecting cracks with the extended finite element method
- A finite element method for crack growth without remeshing