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Propagation of a penny-shaped hydraulic fracture parallel to the free-surface of an elastic half-space

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Abstract

In this paper we analyze the problem of a penny-shaped hydraulic fracture propagating parallel to the free-surface of an elastic half-space. The fracture is driven by an incompressible Newtonian fluid injected at a constant rate at the center of the fracture. The flow of viscous fluid in the fracture is governed by the lubrication equation, while the crack opening and the fluid pressure are related by singular integral equations. We construct two asymptotic solutions based on the assumption that either the solid has no toughness or that the fluid has no viscosity. These asymptotic solutions must be understood as corresponding to limiting cases when the energy expended in the creation of new fracture surfaces is either small or large compared to the energy dissipated in viscous flow. It is shown that the asymptotic solutions, when properly scaled, depend only on the dimensionless parameter cal R cal, the ratio of the fracture radius over the distance from the fracture to the free-surface. The scaled solutions can thus be tabulated once and for all and the dependence of the solution on time can be retrieved for specific parameters, through simple scaling and by solving an implicit equation.

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Correspondence to Emmanuel Detournay.

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Zhang, X., Detournay, E. & Jeffrey, R. Propagation of a penny-shaped hydraulic fracture parallel to the free-surface of an elastic half-space. International Journal of Fracture 115, 125–158 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1016345906315

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