Seismic diffusivity and the influence of heterogeneity on
injection-induced seismicity
Abstract
The spatiotemporal patterns of injection-induced seismicity (IIS) are
commonly interpreted with the concept of a triggering front, which
propagates in a diffusion-like manner with an associated diffusivity
parameter. Here, we refer to this diffusivity as the “seismic
diffusivity”. Several previous studies implicitly assume that seismic
diffusivity is equivalent to the effective hydraulic diffusivity of the
subsurface, which describes the behavior of the mean pressure field in
heterogeneous porous media. Seismicity-based approaches for hydraulic
characterization or simulations of IIS using domains of homogeneous
equivalent porous media are implicitly based on this assumed
equivalence. However, seismicity is expected to propagate with the
threshold triggering pressure, and thus not be controlled by the
evolution of the mean pressure field. We present numerical simulations
of fluid injection to compare the seismic and effective hydraulic
diffusivities in heterogeneous formations (including fractured rock).
The numerical model combines uncoupled, linear pressure diffusion with
the Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion to simulate IIS. We demonstrate that
connected pathways of relatively high hydraulic diffusivity in
heterogeneous media (particularly in fractured rock domains) allow the
threshold triggering pressure to propagate more rapidly than predicted
by the effective hydraulic diffusivity. As a result, the seismic
diffusivity is greater than the effective hydraulic diffusivity in
heterogeneous porous media, possibly by an order of magnitude or more.
Additionally, we present a case study of IIS near Soultz-sous-Forêts
where seismic diffusivity is found to be at least one order of magnitude
larger than the effective hydraulic diffusivity.