Abstract
The storage of fluids in the subsurface is critical for a broad spectrum
of applications including managed aquifer recharge, storage of liquified
carbon dioxide and hydrogen, geothermal heat extraction and management
of hydrocarbon resources. It is surprising then, that there has been
relatively little measurement of the vertical distribution of fluid
storage in geologic formations as compared with permeability. We present
experiments in which fluid was injected into an important regional
aquifer and the depth-dependent strain response measured using fiber
optic distributed acoustic sensing. The formation expansion and
contraction in response to fluid injection were measured in nanostrain.
Strain, and the implied storage distribution, was highly localized in
specific strata and demonstrated complex, (non-elastic and non-local)
hydromechanical behavior. This new window into fluid-geomechanical
coupling undermines some typically use models and observations,
currently in practice, but provides potential for complete
representation and prediction of fluid storage in the subsurface.