A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment

Hydraulically fractured wells with horizontal drilling (HDHF) accounted for 69% of all oil and gas wells drilled and 670 000 of the 977 000 producing wells in 2016. However, only 238 flowback and produced water samples have been analyzed to date for specific organic chemicals. To aid the development...

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Main Authors: Summer, Andrew J., Plata, Desiree Louise
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Published: Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 2020
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/123798
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author Summer, Andrew J.
Plata, Desiree Louise
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Summer, Andrew J.
Plata, Desiree Louise
author_sort Summer, Andrew J.
collection MIT
description Hydraulically fractured wells with horizontal drilling (HDHF) accounted for 69% of all oil and gas wells drilled and 670 000 of the 977 000 producing wells in 2016. However, only 238 flowback and produced water samples have been analyzed to date for specific organic chemicals. To aid the development of predictive tools, we constructed a database combining additive disclosure reports and physicochemical conditions at respective well sites with the goal of making synthesized analyses accessible. As proof-of-concept, we used this database to evaluate transformation pathways through two case studies: (1) a filter-based approach for flagging high-likelihood halogenation sites according to experimental criteria (e.g., for a model compound, cinnamaldehyde) and (2) a semi-quantitative, regionally comparative trihalomethane formation model that leverages an empirically derived equation. Study (1) highlighted 173 wells with high cinnamaldehyde halogenation likelihood based on combined criteria related to subsurface conditions and oxidant additive usage. Study (2) found that trihalomethane formation in certain wells within five specific basins may exceed regulatory limits for drinking water based on reaction-favorable subsurface conditions, albeit with wide uncertainty. While experimentation improves our understanding of subsurface reaction pathways, this database has immediate applications for informing environmental monitors and engineers about potential transformation products in residual fluids, guiding well operators' decisions to avoid unwanted transformations. In the future, we envision more robust components incorporating transformation, transport, toxicity, and other physicochemical parameters to predict subsurface interactions and flowback composition.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1237982022-09-26T17:49:22Z A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment Summer, Andrew J. Plata, Desiree Louise Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics Hydraulically fractured wells with horizontal drilling (HDHF) accounted for 69% of all oil and gas wells drilled and 670 000 of the 977 000 producing wells in 2016. However, only 238 flowback and produced water samples have been analyzed to date for specific organic chemicals. To aid the development of predictive tools, we constructed a database combining additive disclosure reports and physicochemical conditions at respective well sites with the goal of making synthesized analyses accessible. As proof-of-concept, we used this database to evaluate transformation pathways through two case studies: (1) a filter-based approach for flagging high-likelihood halogenation sites according to experimental criteria (e.g., for a model compound, cinnamaldehyde) and (2) a semi-quantitative, regionally comparative trihalomethane formation model that leverages an empirically derived equation. Study (1) highlighted 173 wells with high cinnamaldehyde halogenation likelihood based on combined criteria related to subsurface conditions and oxidant additive usage. Study (2) found that trihalomethane formation in certain wells within five specific basins may exceed regulatory limits for drinking water based on reaction-favorable subsurface conditions, albeit with wide uncertainty. While experimentation improves our understanding of subsurface reaction pathways, this database has immediate applications for informing environmental monitors and engineers about potential transformation products in residual fluids, guiding well operators' decisions to avoid unwanted transformations. In the future, we envision more robust components incorporating transformation, transport, toxicity, and other physicochemical parameters to predict subsurface interactions and flowback composition. 2020-02-13T15:46:29Z 2020-02-13T15:46:29Z 2020-02 2019-11 Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 2050-7887 2050-7895 https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/123798 Sumner, Andrew J. and Desiree L. Plata. "A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment." Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts (February 2020): c9em00505f © 2020 Royal Society of Chemistry http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9em00505f Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial 3.0 unported license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ application/pdf Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
spellingShingle Summer, Andrew J.
Plata, Desiree Louise
A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment
title A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment
title_full A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment
title_fullStr A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment
title_full_unstemmed A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment
title_short A geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment
title_sort geospatially resolved database of hydraulic fracturing wells for chemical transformation assessment
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/123798
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