Diagenetically induced heterogeneity of tight gas reservoirs near Zizhou (Ordos Basin, eastern China)

2022 ◽  
pp. 217-243
Author(s):  
Mi Li ◽  
Yinghai Guo ◽  
Zhuangfu Li ◽  
Huaichang Wang ◽  
A.J. (Tom) van Loon
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 1263-1275
Author(s):  
Shanyong Liu ◽  
Gongyang Chen ◽  
Yishan Lou ◽  
Liang Zhu ◽  
Daoyao Ge

AbstractTight gas reservoirs have rich potential resources, which are hot spots in unconventional oil and gas exploration and development. Due to their strong heterogeneity and complex pore structures, the conventional approaches of productivity evaluation always have difficulty in predicting the gas content. This study aims to devise a new method to interpret the productivity of LX Block in the Ordos Basin using the morphological theory and fuzzy mathematics. First, core test results were used to investigate the reservoir quality and physical properties. Then, the change law of gas content was defined by the morphological theory of logging and mud logging curves. Assignments of those factors that affected the final production were provided based on fuzzy mathematics. Finally, the prediction model of productivity was established. The results show that the lower limit of the reservoir thickness in the LX Block is 3.1 m, whereas the porosity and permeability are 5% and 0.15 × 10−3 μm2, respectively. The morphological characteristic of the gas logging curve for those layers with high potential production normally presents a box shape with a high relative number of serration. The reservoir in the studied area can be classified into four categories according to the relationship between the logging curve shape and daily production, and each category is automatically identified. The coincidence rate between the prediction results and the gas test results is 84.1%, which satisfies the demand on the field. The findings have important theoretical and practical significance for screening the location of fracturing spots and predicting the production of tight gas reservoirs.


2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 544-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hua YANG ◽  
Daxing WANG ◽  
Mengbo ZHANG ◽  
Yonggang WANG ◽  
Lihui LIU ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 36 (6) ◽  
pp. 1438-1460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hao Wu ◽  
Youliang Ji ◽  
Ruie Liu ◽  
Chunlin Zhang ◽  
Sheng Chen

To understand the pore structure and fractal characteristics of tight gas reservoirs, thin sections, nuclear magnetic resonance, rate-controlled mercury injection, microcomputed tomography scanning, and field emission scanning electron microscopy investigations under laboratory conditions were conducted on a suite of core samples from the Middle Permian Shihezi Formation of Sulige area in the Ordos Basin, China. The investigated tight gas sandstones comprise three types of pores, i.e. residual intergranular pore, secondary dissolution pore, and micropore. The pore–throat size distribution is extremely wide and multiscale (10 nm–400 μm) co-existing in tight gas reservoirs. The submicron- and micron-scale pore–throats with radius above 0.05 μm, which are characterized by combining rate-controlled mercury injection with nuclear magnetic resonance, are considered to be the effective pores and throats that dominated the reservoirs flow capacity. Tight gas sandstones have stage fractal characteristics, and the intrusion pressure of approximately 1 MPa is regarded as an inflection point. Fractal dimension is negatively correlated with permeability, average throat radius and mainstream throat radius, positively correlated with heterogeneous coefficient, while there are no obvious relationships with porosity and average pore radius. Additionally, the percolation characteristics of tight gas reservoirs can be characterized by fractal structure. When the pore structure does not follow the fractal structure (i.e. intrusion pressure is lower than 1 MPa), the mercury intrusion saturation is dominated by pores; in contrast, the mercury intrusion saturation is almost solely dominated by throats. This research sheds light on the pore–throat size distribution of tight gas reservoirs by identifying the role of multiple techniques and the relationships between the pore structure parameters and percolation characteristics of tight gas reservoirs and fractal dimension.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans de Koningh ◽  
Bernd Heinrich Herold ◽  
Koksal Cig ◽  
Fahd Ali ◽  
Sultan Mahruqy ◽  
...  

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