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Subsurface Fluid Injection and Induced Fault Reactivation with Hydro-Mechanical Coupling Simulation

thesis
posted on 2025-06-12, 02:02 authored by Feng Xiao
Currently, scientific research plays a pivotal role in addressing societal challenges such as the transition to green renewable energy, climate crisis mitigation, and the maintenance of global stability through reliable energy and water supplies. Subsurface systems and their contained resources are increasingly recognised as a common thread in tackling these issues. Consequently, the ability to predict, optimise, and ultimately control fluid movement and its response to multi-physics coupling processes in fractured subsurface environments has become a critical research area. Three crucial underground engineering applications: hydro-power tunnel operations, pressurised tunnel design, and hydraulic fracturing are researched. These activities introduce complex hydro-mechanical interactions that can lead to challenges such as tunnel leakage, fault reactivation, and fracture propagation.

History

Campus location

Australia

Principal supervisor

Qianbing Zhang

Additional supervisor 1

Jian Zhao

Additional supervisor 2

Saeed Salimzadeh

Year of Award

2025

Department, School or Centre

Civil Engineering

Course

Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Type

DOCTORATE

Faculty

Faculty of Engineering

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