Geomechanics and FracturingIn-Situ Stress and Rock Mechanics
Radial Stress Around a Vertical Wellbore Formula
Radial Stress Around a Vertical Wellbore calculates radial stress for in-situ stress and rock mechanics workflows in geomechanics and fracturing.
How engineers use this formula
Use this formula when the listed inputs (S_hmax, S_hmin, P_o, R, r, theta) are known and the assumptions behind the cited in-situ stress and rock mechanics relationship match the engineering case being checked.
Assumptions
- Input values are representative for the well, reservoir, fluid, or equipment case being evaluated.
- The declared units match the field-unit constants used in the formula.
- The cited formula applies to the selected petroleum engineering workflow.
Limitations
- The calculation does not replace a full engineering model or operating procedure.
- Accuracy depends on the source correlation, assumptions, input quality, and unit consistency.
Common mistakes
- Mixing unit systems without converting the inputs.
- Using default example values as field recommendations.
- Applying the formula outside the source assumptions.
Default example
Using the default inputs, sigma_rr equals 4,099.97763 psi.
S_hmaxpsi
8000
S_hminpsi
6000
P_opsi
3500
Rft
0.33
rft
1
thetarad
0
Inputs
S_hmax
psiMaximum Horizontal Stress
S_hmin
psiMinimum Horizontal Stress
P_o
psiPore Pressure
R
ftWellbore Radius
r
ftRadial Position from Wellbore Center
theta
radAzimuth from Maximum Horizontal Stress Direction
Outputs
sigma_rr
psi
Radial Stress
Source and review
reviewedZoback, M.D. 2007. Reservoir Geomechanics, Cambridge University Press, Page 170.
SourceRelated formulas and calculators
Spherical Matrix Block Interporosity Flow Coefficient
Naturally Fractured Reservoirs