2021
DOI: 10.1186/s40517-021-00197-w
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Stress sensitivity of porosity and permeability under varying hydrostatic stress conditions for different carbonate rock types of the geothermal Malm reservoir in Southern Germany

Abstract: In geothermal reservoir systems, changes in pore pressure due to production (depletion), injection or temperature changes result in a displacement of the effective stresses acting on the rock matrix of the aquifer. To compensate for these intrinsic stress changes, the rock matrix is subjected to poroelastic deformation through changes in rock and pore volume. This in turn may induce changes in the effective pore network and thus in the hydraulic properties of the aquifer. Therefore, for the conception of preci… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 121 publications
(212 reference statements)
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“…Based on geological field observations, Schröder (1970Schröder ( , 1987 estimated an original thickness of > 300 m of Cretaceous sediments in the Franconian Alb area, a value which was later confirmed by and based on paleogeographic considerations. From other published data a rough picture emerges of a Cretaceous sediment cover decreasing from ∼ 1-2 km Schröder, 1987) directly in front of the Franconian Line down to about 200-400 m farther west Niebuhr et al, 2009;Schröder, 1970;Voigt et al, 2008), eventually leading to total pinch-out Hejl et al, 1997) are Kemnath (Kn), seismic borehole data (white squares) are from Eichstätt (B05) and Daiting (B10) (Buness and Bram, 2001;Welz, 1994), and sonic log data are from Zapfendorf (Zd) (white triangle; Welz, 1994). Cz: Czech Republic.…”
Section: Regional Post-jurassic Thicknessesmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Based on geological field observations, Schröder (1970Schröder ( , 1987 estimated an original thickness of > 300 m of Cretaceous sediments in the Franconian Alb area, a value which was later confirmed by and based on paleogeographic considerations. From other published data a rough picture emerges of a Cretaceous sediment cover decreasing from ∼ 1-2 km Schröder, 1987) directly in front of the Franconian Line down to about 200-400 m farther west Niebuhr et al, 2009;Schröder, 1970;Voigt et al, 2008), eventually leading to total pinch-out Hejl et al, 1997) are Kemnath (Kn), seismic borehole data (white squares) are from Eichstätt (B05) and Daiting (B10) (Buness and Bram, 2001;Welz, 1994), and sonic log data are from Zapfendorf (Zd) (white triangle; Welz, 1994). Cz: Czech Republic.…”
Section: Regional Post-jurassic Thicknessesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Interval velocity data from Lias and Dogger claystones and mudstones from a shallow seismic refraction survey for lowvelocity layers in the course of this study (see Fig. 1 for locations), published borehole geophone data from Buness and Bram (2001), and sonic log velocity data from a shallow wellbore (Zapfendorf) in the NW part of the study area (Welz, 1994) were also integrated.…”
Section: Franconian Alb Sample Locations and Data Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…6 Cross-section through the North Alpine Foreland Basin, SE Germany from [21,22] (left) and [1], mod. after [23] and [24] (right) the borehole with a maximum equivalent drilling mud weight of 1.9 g/cm 3 was examined pattern for a borehole within a limestone formation under hydrostatic pressure conditions at the selected depth stages with the failure depth in the borehole calculated after [13].…”
Section: Northern Alpine Foreland Basin Se Germanymentioning
confidence: 99%