1974
DOI: 10.2118/4051-pa
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Unsteady-State Pressure Distributions Created by a Well With a Single Infinite-Conductivity Vertical Fracture

Abstract: Introduction During the last few years, there has been an explostion of information in the field of well-test analysis. Because of increased physical understanding of transient fluid flow, it is possible to analyze the entire pressure history of a well test, not just long-time data as in conventional analysis.1 It is now often possible to specify the time of beginning of the correct semilog straight line and determine whether the correct straight lie has been properly identified. It is also p… Show more

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Cited by 559 publications
(281 citation statements)
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“…The case of a vertical fracture of finite extension but infinite conductivity (Gringarten et al 1974) is shown in Fig. 2g.…”
Section: The Most Typical Diagnostic Plotsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The case of a vertical fracture of finite extension but infinite conductivity (Gringarten et al 1974) is shown in Fig. 2g.…”
Section: The Most Typical Diagnostic Plotsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For a well connected to a highly conductive fracture within an infinite reservoir, flow near the fracture has been shown to be linear at early times [8]. This suggests that a useful approximation to model the leakoff behavior near fractures is to assume 1-D flow away from the fracture.…”
Section: One-dimensional Leakoff Approximation Model Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reservoir response for this problem is a linear flow regime at early times, followed by a transition to radial flow at later times. A closed-form solution exists for the transient pressure response at the well [8]: …”
Section: Injection Into An Infinite-conductivity Fracturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, if the well or the pumped conduit are large enough to induce a significant well-storage effect, a modified solution can be applied (GRINGARTEN & RAMEY 1974b;RAMEY & GRINGARTEN 1976). This storage volume involves all high-hydraulic conductivity volumes that communicate with the well.…”
Section: Cent-fonts Karst Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%