Improved Detection of Bed Boundaries for Petrophysical Evaluation with Well Logs: Applications to Carbonate and Organic-Shale Formations

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoya Heidari ◽  
Carlos Torres-Verdin
2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. T129-T142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoya Heidari ◽  
Carlos Torres-Verdín

Petrophysical interpretation of well logs acquired in organic shales and carbonates is challenging because of the presence of thin beds and spatially complex lithology; conventional interpretation techniques often fail in such cases. Recently introduced methods for thin-bed interpretation enable corrections for shoulder-bed effects on well logs but remain sensitive to incorrectly picked bed boundaries. We introduce a new inversion-based method to detect bed boundaries and to estimate petrophysical and compositional properties of multilayer formations from conventional well logs in the presence of thin beds, complex lithology/fluids, and kerogen. Bed boundaries and bed properties are updated in two serial inversion loops. Numerical simulation of well logs within both inversion loops explicitly takes into account differences in the volume of investigation of all well logs involved in the estimation, thereby enabling corrections for shoulder-bed effects. The successful application of the new interpretation method is documented with synthetic cases and field data acquired in thinly bedded carbonates and in the Haynesville shale-gas formation. Estimates of petrophysical/compositional properties obtained with the new interpretation method were compared to those obtained with (1) nonlinear inversion of well logs with inaccurate bed boundaries, (2) depth-by-depth inversion of well logs, and (3) core/x-ray diffraction measurements. Results indicated that the new method improves the estimation of porosity of thin beds by more than 200% in the carbonate field example and by more than 40% in the shale-gas example, compared to depth-by-depth interpretation results obtained with commercial software. This improvement in the assessment of petrophysical/compositional properties reduces uncertainty in hydrocarbon reserves and aids in the selection of hydraulic fracture locations in organic shale.


2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (06) ◽  
pp. 711-729 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Francis Worthington

Summary A user-friendly type chart has been constructed as an aid to the evaluation of water saturation from well logs. It provides a basis for the inter-reservoir comparison of electrical character in terms of adherence to, or departures from, Archie conditions in the presence of significant shaliness and/or low formation-water salinity. Therefore, it constitutes an analog facility. The deliverables include reservoir classification to guide well-log analysis, a protocol for optimizing the acquisition of special core data in support of log analysis, and reservoir characterization in terms of an (analog) porosity exponent and saturation exponent. The type chart describes a continuum of electrical behavior for both water and hydrocarbon zones. This is important because some reservoir rocks can conform to Archie conditions in the fully water-saturated state, but show pronounced departures from Archie conditions in the partially water-saturated state. In this respect, the chart is an extension of earlier approaches that were restricted to the water zone. This extension is achieved by adopting a generalized geometric factor—the ratio of water conductivity to formation conductivity—regardless of the degree of hydrocarbon saturation. The type chart relates a normalized form of this geometric factor to formation-water conductivity, a "shale" conductivity term, and (irreducible) water saturation. The chart has been validated using core data from comprehensively studied reservoirs. A workflow details the application of the type chart to core and/or log data. The analog role of the chart is illustrated for reservoir units that show different levels of non-Archie effects. The application of the method should take rock types, scale effects, the degree of core sampling, and net reservoir criteria into account. The principal benefit is a reduced uncertainty in the choice of a procedure for the petrophysical evaluation of water saturation, especially at an early stage in the appraisal/development process, when adequate characterizing data may not be available. Introduction One of the ever-present problems in petrophysics is how to carry out a meaningful evaluation of well logs in situations where characterizing information from quality-assured core analysis is either unavailable or is insufficient to satisfactorily support the log interpretation. This problem is especially pertinent at an early stage in the life of a field, when reservoir data are relatively sparse. Data shortfalls could be mitigated if there was a means of identifying petrophysical analogs of reservoir character, so that the broader experience of the hydrocarbon industry could be utilized in constructing reservoir models and thence be brought to bear on current appraisal and development decisions. Here, a principal requirement calls for type charts of petrophysical character, on which data from different reservoirs can be plotted and compared, as a basis for aligning approaches to future data acquisition and interpretation. This need manifests itself strongly in the petrophysical evaluation of water saturation, a process that traditionally uses the electrical properties of a reservoir rock to deliver key building blocks for an integrated reservoir model. The solution to this problem calls for an analog facility through which the electrical character of a subject reservoir can be compared with others that have been more comprehensively studied. In this way, the degree of confidence in log-derived water saturation might be reinforced. At the limit, the log analyst needs a reference basis for recourse to capillary pressure data in cases where the well-log evaluation of water saturation turns out to be prohibitively uncertain.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. SB15-SB25
Author(s):  
Gorka Garcia Leiceaga ◽  
Mark Norton ◽  
Joël Le Calvez

Seismic-derived elastic properties may be used to help evaluate hydrocarbon production capacity in unconventional plays such as tight or shale formations. By combining prestack seismic and well log data, inversion-based volumes of elastic properties may be produced. Moreover, a petrophysical evaluation and rock physics analysis may be carried out, thus leading to a spatial distribution of hydrocarbon production capacity. The result obtained is corroborated with the available well information, confirming our ability to accurately predict hydrocarbon production capacity in unconventional plays.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghadeer Al-Sulami ◽  
Mohammed Boudjatit ◽  
Mohammed Al-Duhailan ◽  
Salvatore Di Simone

2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. T113-T123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zoya Heidari ◽  
Carlos Torres-Verdín

Reliable estimates of petrophysical and compositional properties of organic shale are critical for detecting perforation zones or candidates for hydro-fracturing jobs. Current methods for in situ formation evaluation of organic shale largely rely on qualitative responses and empirical formulas. Even core measurements can be inconsistent and inaccurate when evaluating clay minerals and other grain constituents. We implement a recently introduced inversion-based method for organic-shale evaluation from conventional well logs. The objective is to estimate total porosity, total organic carbon (TOC), and volumetric/weight concentrations of mineral/fluid constituents. After detecting bed boundaries, the first step of the method is to perform separate inversion of individual well logs to estimate bed physical properties such as density, neutron migration length, electrical conductivity, photoelectric factor (PEF), and thorium, uranium , and potassium volumetric/weight concentrations. Next, a multilayer petrophysical model specific to organic shale is constructed with an initial guess obtained from conventional well-log interpretation or X-ray diffraction data; bed physical properties are calculated with the initial layer-by-layer values. Final estimates of organic shale petrophysical and compositional properties are obtained by progressively minimizing the difference between calculated and measured bed properties. A unique advantage of this method is the correction of shoulder-bed effects on well logs, which are prevalent in shale-gas plays. Another advantage is the explicit calculation of accurate well-log responses for specific petrophysical, mineral, fluid, and kerogen properties based on chemical formulas and volumetric concentrations of minerals/kerogen and fluid constituents. Examples are described of the successful application of the new organic-shale evaluation method in the Haynesville shale-gas formation. This formation includes complex solid compositions and thin beds where rapid depth variations of mineral/fluid constituents are commonplace. Comparison of estimates for total porosity, total water saturation, and TOC obtained with (a) commercial software for multimineral analysis, (b) our organic-shale evaluation method, and (c) core/X-ray diffraction measurements indicates a significant improvement in estimates of total porosity and water saturation yielded by our interpretation method. The estimated TOC is also in agreement with core laboratory measurements.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vikas Jain ◽  
Kais Gzara ◽  
Gennady Makarychev ◽  
Chanh Cao Minh ◽  
Denis Heliot

Geophysics ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yujin Zhang ◽  
Henry A. Salisch ◽  
Christoph Arns

It is usually difficult for petroleum engineers and geoscientists to obtain reliable estimates of permeability from geophysical logs, especially in lithologically complex formations such as the Mardie Greensand Formation in the Carnarvon Basin, Australia, which consists of lower Cretaceous glauconite‐rich sandstones. This paper presents an alternative petrophysical evaluation of permeability in this formation through the integration of the geological and petrophysical analyses. Neural network techniques were used to establish permeability prediction models in cored wells or sections and to predict permeability from well logs in uncored wells or sections. The permeabilities obtained from minipermeameter measurements were taken as the basis and reference for the petrophysical evaluation. Four log‐derived parameters, which best reflect the permeability in the Mardie Formation, were defined and extracted from the available conventional logs. These parameters (not original log responses) were taken as the log inputs to evaluate permeability. Through the training, testing, and validation of the networks using the log and core data in the cored intervals, a permeability prediction model/network was established. Further, the permeabilities in 15 wildcat wells were determined from conventional well logs. The results indicate that the petrophysical evaluation of permeability is valid and applicable in the Mardie Formation.


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