scholarly journals Comprehensive correction method of airtight coring saturation based on core classification

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (6 Part A) ◽  
pp. 4153-4160
Author(s):  
Junjie Dong ◽  
Rui Deng

The indoor comprehensive analysis of core saturation of airtight coring wells is an important part of well logging interpretation. According to the saturation data, the geological reserves can be accurately calculated, and the remaining oil saturation and water-flooded zone in the later stage of the production well can be accurately evaluated. Due to the influence of many factors in the coring process and the experiment process, the sum of the core oil and water saturation is usually not equal to 100%. At present, conventional airtight coring correction method is generally to analyze the oil-water saturation, and then correct the data of the same factors that affect the results. This article combines two methods for saturation correction of XX oilfield in China. For cores with consistent missing factors, mathematical statistics are used to correct the saturation. When most of the rock pores have irreducible water and remaining oil, the phase percolation split method is used for the correction after the experimental analysis. By comparing with the logging interpretation results and the results of adjacent wells, the feasibility of the comprehensive correction method can be verified.

Author(s):  
A. Syahputra

Surveillance is very important in managing a steamflood project. On the current surveillance plan, Temperature and steam ID logs are acquired on observation wells at least every year while CO log (oil saturation log or SO log) every 3 years. Based on those surveillance logs, a dynamic full field reservoir model is updated quarterly. Typically, a high depletion rate happens in a new steamflood area as a function of drainage activities and steamflood injection. Due to different acquisition time, there is a possibility of misalignment or information gaps between remaining oil maps (ie: net pay, average oil saturation or hydrocarbon pore thickness map) with steam chest map, for example a case of high remaining oil on high steam saturation interval. The methodology that is used to predict oil saturation log is neural network. In this neural network method, open hole observation wells logs (static reservoir log) such as vshale, porosity, water saturation effective, and pay non pay interval), dynamic reservoir logs as temperature, steam saturation, oil saturation, and acquisition time are used as input. A study case of a new steamflood area with 16 patterns of single reservoir target used 6 active observation wells and 15 complete logs sets (temperature, steam ID, and CO log), 19 incomplete logs sets (only temperature and steam ID) since 2014 to 2019. Those data were divided as follows ~80% of completed log set data for neural network training model and ~20% of completed log set data for testing the model. As the result of neural model testing, R2 is score 0.86 with RMS 5% oil saturation. In this testing step, oil saturation log prediction is compared to actual data. Only minor data that shows different oil saturation value and overall shape of oil saturation logs are match. This neural network model is then used for oil saturation log prediction in 19 incomplete log set. The oil saturation log prediction method can fill the gap of data to better describe the depletion process in a new steamflood area. This method also helps to align steam map and remaining oil to support reservoir management in a steamflood project.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marisely Urdaneta

Abstract This paper aims to address calibration of a coreflood Alkali Surfactant Polymer (ASP) formulation experiment through parametrization of fluid-fluid and rock-fluid interactions considering cation exchange capacity and by rock to guide an ASP pilot design. First of all, a series of chemical formulation experiments were studied in cores drilled from clastic reservoir so that displacement lab tests were run on linear and radial cores to determine the potential for oil recovery by ASP flooding and recommended the chemical formulation and flooding schemes, in terms of oil recovery. Therefore, to simulate the process, those tests performed with radial core injection were taken, because this type of test has a better representation of the fluid flow in reservoir, the fluids are injected by a perforation in the center of the core, moving in a radial direction the fluids inside the porous medium. Subsequently, displaced fluids are collected on the periphery of the core carrier and stored in graduated test tubes. The recommended test was carried out to the phase of numerical simulation and historical matching. Reservoir simulation is one of the most important tools available to predict behavior under chemical flooding conditions and to study sensitivities based on cost-effective process implementation. Then, a radial core simulation model was designed from formulation data with porosity of 42.6%, a pore volume (PV) of 344.45 ml, radius of 7.17 cm and weight of 1225.84 g. The initial oil saturation was 0.748 PV (257.58 ml), with a critical water saturation of 0.252 PV (86.78 ml). For the simulation model historical matching, adjustments were made until an acceptable comparison was obtained with laboratory test production data through parameterization of relative permeability curves, chemical adsorption parameters, polymer viscosity, among others; resulting in an accumulated effluents production mass 37% greater for alkali than obtained in the historical, regarding to surfactant the deviation was 8% considered acceptable and for the polymer the adjustment was very close. For the injector well bottom pressure, the viscosity ratio of the mixture was considered based on the polymer concentration and the effect of the shear rate on the viscosity of the polymer as well as the effect of salinity in the alkali case. Finally, a calibrated coreflood numerical simulation model was obtained for ASP flooding to design an ASP Pilot with a residual oil saturation of 0.09 PV (31 ml) meaning 64% more recovered oil compared to a waterflooding case.


SPE Journal ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-26
Author(s):  
Sajjaat Muhemmed ◽  
Harish Kumar ◽  
Nicklaus Cairns ◽  
Hisham A. Nasr-El-Din

Summary Limited studies have been conducted in understanding the mechanics of preflush stages in sandstone-acidizing processes. Among those conducted in this area, all efforts have been directed toward singular aqueous-phase scenarios. Encountering 100% water saturation (Sw) in the near-wellbore region is seldom the case because hydrocarbons at residual or higher saturations can exist. Carbonate-mineral dissolution, being the primary objective of the preflush stage, results in carbon dioxide (CO2) evolution. This can lead to a multiphase presence depending on the conditions in the porous medium, and this factor has been unaccounted for in previous studies under the assumption that all the evolved CO2 is dissolved in the surrounding solutions. The performance of a preflush stage changes in the presence of multiphase environments in the porous media. A detailed study is presented on the effects of evolved CO2 caused by carbonate-mineral dissolution, and its ensuing activity during the preflush stages in matrix acidizing of sandstone reservoirs. Four Carbon Tan Sandstone cores were used toward the purpose of this study, of which two were fully water saturated and the remaining two were brought to initial water saturation (Swi) and residual oil saturation to waterfloods (Sorw) before conducting preflush-stage experiments. The preflush-stage fluid, 15 wt% hydrochloric acid (HCl), was injected in the concerning cores while maintaining initial pore pressures of 1,200 psi and constant temperatures of 150°F. A three-phase-flow numerical-simulation model coupled with chemical-reaction and structure-property modeling features is used to validate the conducted preflush-stage coreflood experiments. Initially, the cores are scanned using computed tomography (CT) to accurately characterize the initial porosity distributions across the cores. The carbonate minerals present in the cores, namely calcite and dolomite, are quantified experimentally using X-ray diffraction (XRD). These measured porosity distributions and mineral concentrations are populated across the core-representative models. The coreflood effluents’ calcium chloride and magnesium chloride, which are acid/carbonate-mineral-reaction products, as well as spent-HCl concentrations were measured. The pressure drop across the cores was logged during the tests. These parameters from all the conducted coreflood tests were used for history matching using the numerical model. The calibrated numerical model was then used to understand the physics involved in this complex subsurface process. In fully water-saturated cores, a major fraction of unreacted carbonate minerals still existed even after 40 pore volumes (PV) of preflush acid injection. Heterogeneity is induced as carbonate-mineral dissolution progresses within the core, creating paths of least resistance, leading to the preferential flow of the incoming fresh acid. This leads to regions of carbonate minerals being untouched during the preflush stimulation stage. A power-law trend, P = aQb, is observed between the stabilized pressure drops at each sequential acid-injection rate vs. the injection rates, where P is the pressure drop across the core, Q is the sequential flow rate, and a and b are constants, with b < 1. An ideal maximum injection rate can be deduced to optimize the preflush stage toward efficient carbonate-mineral dissolution in the damaged zone. An average of 25% recovery of the oil in place (OIP) was seen from preflush experiments conducted on cores with Sorw. In cores with Swi, the oil saturation was reduced during the preflush stage to a similar value as in the cores with Sorw. The oil-phase-viscosity reduction caused by CO2 dissolution in oil and the increase in saturation and permeability to the oil phase resulting from oil swelling by CO2 are inferred as the main mechanisms for any additional oil production beyond residual conditions during the preflush stage. The potential of evolved CO2, a byproduct of the sandstone-acidizing preflush stage, toward its contribution in swelling the surrounding oil, lowering its viscosity, and thus mobilizing the trapped oil has been depicted in this study


2015 ◽  
Vol 109 (3) ◽  
pp. 527-540 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Hu ◽  
Shenglai Yang ◽  
Guangfeng Liu ◽  
Zhilin Wang ◽  
Ping Wang ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 3649-3661
Author(s):  
Meiling Zhang ◽  
Jiayi Fan ◽  
Yongchao Zhang ◽  
Yinxin Liu

Abstract The water cutting rate is recorded dynamically during the production process of a well. If the remaining oil saturation of the reservoir can be deduced based on the water cutting rate, it will give guidance to improve the reservoir recovery and can save expensive drilling costs. In the oil–water two-phase seepage experiment on core samples, the oil and water relative permeability reflects the relationship between the water cutting rate and water saturation, that is, percolating saturation formula. The relative permeability test data of 17 rock samples from six seal coring wells in Daqing Changyuan were used to optimize and construct the coefficients of the index percolating saturation formula that vary with the pore structure parameters of reservoirs, to form an index percolating saturation formula with variable coefficients that is more consistent with the regional geological characteristics of the reservoir. Based on this, the formula of water saturation calculated by the water cutting rate is deduced. And the high-precision formula for calculating the irreducible water saturation and residual oil saturation by effective porosity, absolute permeability, and shale content is given. The derivative formula of water saturation on the water cutting rate was established, and the parameters of 17 rock samples were calculated. It was found that the variation velocity of water saturation of each sample with the water cutting rate presented a “U” shape, which was consistent with the actual characteristics that the variation velocity of the water saturation in the early, middle, and late stages of oilfield development first decreased, then stabilized, and finally increased rapidly. The research results were applied to the prediction of remaining oil saturation in the research area, and the water saturation about six producing wells was calculated by using their present water cutting rates, and the remaining oil distribution profile was predicted effectively. The analysis of four layers of two newly drilled infill wells and reasonable oil recovery suggestions were given to achieve good results.


2006 ◽  
Vol 9 (03) ◽  
pp. 259-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uffe Korsbech ◽  
Helle Aage ◽  
Kathrine Hedegaard ◽  
Bertel L. Andersen ◽  
Niels Springer

Summary The movement of connate water spiked with gamma-emitting 22 Na (a radioactive sodium isotope) was studied during laboratory waterflooding of oil-saturated chalk at connate-water saturation from a North Sea reservoir. Using a 1D gamma-monitoring technique, it was observed that connate water is piled up at the front of the injection water and forms a mixed water bank with almost 100% connate water in the front, behind which a gradual transition to pure injection water occurs. This result underpins log interpretations from waterflooded chalk reservoirs. An ad hoc model was set up by use of the results, and the process was examined theoretically at a larger scale. Introduction The behavior of the in-situ, or connate, water in an oil reservoir under waterflooding has been investigated only sparsely in the past. A study of the mobility of connate water in sandpacks during waterflooding showed that the connate water became mobile and formed a buffer zone between the injection water and the mobilized oil phase (Brown 1957). Water imbibition in a fractured chalk plug using D2O (labeled connate water) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) imaging showed that the connate water was swept up in front of the imbibing water (Nielsen et al. 2000). If these observations are valid on a reservoir scale, it means that it is the connate water that actually displaces the oil during a waterflood. Laboratory corefloods have demonstrated that the remaining oil saturation after a waterflood depends on chalk type, chalk porosity, and initial oil saturation. Waterflooding of oil-saturated chalk cores develops an oil/water shock front that displaces the mobile oil in a nearly pistonlike manner with very little oil cut after water breakthrough, in agreement with theoretical expectations (Dake 1978). Sharp oil/water fronts have been observed from logging of waterflooded zones in North Sea chalk reservoirs (Ovens et al. 1998). The actual oil saturation and its potential variation within the waterflooded zone is, however, often difficult to assess from standard petrophysical logs of a waterflooded zone because of a change in resistivity and temperature after injection of cold seawater. An a priori model has been proposed by Ovens et al. (1998) from an inspection of resistivity profiles across waterflooded zones in the Danish North Sea. The observations indicate that the injection of cold seawater into an oil-bearing chalk reservoir will generate a bank of reservoir-temperature formation water between the cold injection water and the displaced oil. The logs (porosity, water saturation, and deep resistivity) show that the injected water does not mix thoroughly with the formation water when the oil/water front progresses through the reservoir. In an attempt to verify the a priori model, a dedicated laboratory waterflooding program was developed. Synthetic seawater with a chemical composition corresponding to diluted Dan field brine was injected into plugs saturated with oil and connate water of the same chemical composition as the synthetic seawater. The connate water, however, was spiked with 22Na (gamma ray emitter), whereby the movement of connate water could be followed in time and space. Basic parameters have been determined from the experiments, and an ad hoc model describing the interaction between injection water, oil, and connate water has been constructed. Finally, this model has been used to predict what will happen for a deep penetration of injection water into chalk saturated with oil and connate water.


Geophysics ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 76 (5) ◽  
pp. A31-A36 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Revil ◽  
Myriam Schmutz ◽  
Mike L. Batzle

The presence of oil in an unconsolidated granular porous material, like a sand, changes both the resistivity of the material and the value of the phase lag between the current and the voltage. We performed laboratory experiments to investigate the influence of oil wettability and water saturation upon the complex resistivity of oil-bearing sands in the frequency range 1 mHz–1 kHz. For a sand saturated by a nonwetting oil, both the resistivity and the magnitude of the phase increase with the oil saturation, as expected from theoretical considerations. In the case of a sand partially saturated by a wetting oil, we found that both the magnitude of the phase and the resistivity decrease with the oil saturation. The quadrature conductivity decreases with the oil with the same trend in presence of wetting and nonwetting oils for relative water saturation above 0.5. In the case of a nonwetting oil, the results are quantitatively predicted by available theories. In the case of a wet oil, our results could be interpreted as resulting from the increase of the cation exchange capacity associated with the presence of a polar component at the oil water interface.


2020 ◽  
pp. 67-76
Author(s):  
G. E. Stroyanetskaya

The article is devoted to the usage of models of transition zones in the interpretation of geological and geophysical information. These models are graphs of the dependences of oil-saturation factors of the collectors on their height above the level with zero capillary pressure, taking into account the geological and geophysical parameter. These models are not recommended for estimating oilsaturation factors of collectors in the transition zone. The height of occurrence of the collector above the level of zero capillary pressure can be estimated from model of the transition zone that take into account the values of the coefficients of residual water saturation factor of the collectors, but only when the model of the transition zone is confirmed by data capillarimetry studies on the core.


2013 ◽  
Vol 318 ◽  
pp. 390-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhong Hao Wang ◽  
Jin Bo Wu ◽  
Jing Gong Li

At present, the most advanced remaining oil saturation logging technologies are RPM RST RMT PNN PND in domestic and outside. But these have only been made some correction of porosity, lithology, borehole conditions, formation water salinity, oil density. So they are not suitable for application in the offshore heavy oil reservoirs of gravel pack. The writer has designed a volumetric model of considering gravel pack, casing size, wellhole liquid and so on. And some correction formulas are deduced with single factor and multiple factors by combining this volume model. While the author use these formulas to establish some theoretical charts. In the case of that the porosity is 0.3, the author analyzes the C/O value change rule with the same oil saturation in sandstone strata. When the gravel packing volume of 0.1, the C/O value decreases about 0.15. When casing diameter increases from 6inches to 7inches, the C/O value increases about 0.2. When the casing diameter is 6inches, make the clay content, gravel content, and calcium content for 0.1, the C/O value increases about 0.6. After making the gravel pack and other influencing factors correction, contrast RPM data interpretation results and PLT data interpretation results. It is found that the results of remaining oil explain accuracy is improved 10% or more. These methods provide a new theoretical basis for the offshore heavy oil reservoir in the fine interpretation of RPM data.


2013 ◽  
Vol 321-324 ◽  
pp. 890-893
Author(s):  
Dong Zhang ◽  
Bai Quan Yan ◽  
Er Shuang Gao

Point bar reservoir is the key development object in the late stage of oilfield development at present. In this paper, numerical simulation is done on the basis of the point bar architecture in the modeling of the point bar. Through dynamic data generating simulated well history and acquiring X-unit splitting factor, history matching is done on this basis. The numerical simulation results reveal that oil saturation has belt distribution characteristics on the pane due to the lateral accretion interlayer affect to the oil-water displacement; injection wells transverse spread is limited by the lateral accretion interbed control; by lateral accretion interlayer updip pinchout control, the remaining oil is mainly located in the middle and upper part of the lateral accretion [1,2]. Because of the above characteristics, taking horizontal wells to develop the top remaining oil of point bar has been very good results. And it has been confirmed by the further results of the numerical simulation.


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