AN INTEGRATED PETROPHYSICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF A SILICICLASTIC TIGHT GAS RESERVOIRS IN NEUQUÉN BASIN, WESTERN ARGENTINA

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Carrizo ◽  
◽  
Emiliano Santiago ◽  
Pablo Saldungaray ◽  
◽  
...  

The Río Neuquén field is located thirteen miles north west of Neuquén city, between Neuquén and Río Negro provinces, Argentina. Historically it has been a conventional oil producer, but some years ago it was converted to a tight gas producer targeting deeper reservoirs. The targeted geological formations are Lajas, which is already a known tight gas producer in the Neuquén basin, and the less known overlaying Punta Rosada formation, which is the main objective of the current work. Punta Rosada presents a diverse lithology, including shaly intervals separating multiple stacked reservoirs that grade from fine-grained sandstones to conglomerates. The reservoir pressure can change from the normal hydrostatic gradient to up to 50% of overpressure, there is little evidence of movable water. The key well in this study has a comprehensive set of open hole logs, including NMR and pulsed-neutron spectroscopy data, and it is supported by a full core study over a 597ft section in Punta Rosada. Additionally, data from several offset wells were used, containing sidewall cores and complete sets of electrical logs. This allowed to develop rock-calibrated mineral models, adjusting the clay volume with X-ray diffraction data, porosity and permeability with confined core measurements, and link the logs interpretation to dominant pore throat radius models from MICP Purcell tests at 60,000 psi. Several water saturation models were tested attempting to adjust the irreducible water saturation with NMR and Purcell tests at reservoir conditions. As a result, three hydraulic units were defined and characterized, identifying a strong correlation with lithofacies observed in cores and image logs. A cluster analysis model allowed the propagation of the facies to the rest of the wells (50). Finally, lithofacies were distributed in a full-field 3D model, guided by an elastic seismic inversion. In the main key well, in addition to the open hole logs and core data, a cased hole pulsed neutron log (PNL) was also acquired , which was used to develop algorithms to generate synthetic pseudo open hole logs such as bulk density and resistivity, integrated with the spectroscopy mineralogical information and other PNL data to perform the petrophysical evaluation. This enables the option to evaluate wells in contingency situations where open hole logs are not possible or are too risky, and also in planned situations to replace the open hole data in infill wells, saving considerable drilling rig time to reduce costs during this field development phase. Additionally, the calibrated cased hole model can be used in old wells already drilled and cased in the Punta Rosada formation. This paper explores the integration of different core and log measurements and explains the development of rock-calibrated petrophysical and rock types models for open and cased hole logs addressing the characterization challenges found in tight gas sand reservoirs. The results of this study will be crucial to optimize the development of a new producing horizon in a mature field.

Author(s):  
Nicolas Carrizo ◽  
◽  
Emiliano Santiago ◽  
Pablo Saldungaray ◽  
◽  
...  

The Río Neuquén Field is located between Neuquén and Río Negro provinces, Argentina. Historically, it has been a conventional oil producer, but it was converted to a tight gas producer from deeper reservoirs. The targeted geological formations are Lajas, which is already a known tight gas producer, and the less-known overlaying Punta Rosada Formation, which is the main objective of the current work. Punta Rosada presents a diverse lithology, including shaly intervals separating multiple stacked reservoirs that grade from fine-grained sandstones to conglomerates. The reservoir pressure can change from the normal hydrostatic gradient to up to 50% of overpressure. There is little evidence of movable water. The key well in this study has a comprehensive set of openhole logs, including pulsed-neutron spectroscopy data, and is supported by a full core study over 597 ft. Additionally, data from several offset wells were used, containing sidewall cores and complete sets of electrical logs. This allowed the development of rock-calibrated mineral models, adjusting the clay volume with X-ray diffraction data, porosity, and permeability with core measurements, and linking the log interpretation to dominant pore-throat radius models from MICP Purcell tests. Several water saturation models were tested, attempting to adjust the irreducible water saturation with NMR and Purcell tests at reservoir conditions. As a result, three hydraulic units were defined and characterized, identifying a strong correlation with lithofacies observed in cores and image logs. A cluster analysis model allowed the propagation of the facies to the rest of the wells (50). Finally, lithofacies were distributed in a full-field 3D model, guided by an elastic seismic inversion. In the main key well, in addition to the openhole logs and core data, a casedhole pulsed-neutron log (PNL) was also acquired, which was used to develop algorithms to generate synthetic pseudo-openhole logs such as bulk density and resistivity, integrated with the spectroscopy mineralogical information and other PNL data, to perform the petrophysical evaluation. This enables the option to evaluate wells in contingency situations where openhole logs are not possible or too risky, and also in planned situations to replace the openhole data in infill wells, saving considerable drilling rig time during this field development phase. Additionally, the calibrated casedhole model can be used in old wells. This paper explores the integration of different core and log measurements and explains the development of rock-calibrated petrophysical and rock type models addressing the characterization challenges found in tight gas sand reservoirs. The results of this study will be crucial to optimize the field development.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
Ubong Essien ◽  
Akaninyene Akankpo ◽  
Okechukwu Agbasi

Petrophysical analysis was performed in two wells in the Niger Delta Region, Nigeria. This study is aimed at making available petrophysical data, basically water saturation calculation using cementation values of 2.0 for the reservoir formations of two wells in the Niger delta basin. A suite of geophysical open hole logs namely Gamma ray; Resistivity, Sonic, Caliper and Density were used to determine petrophysical parameters. The parameters determined are; volume of shale, porosity, water saturation, irreducible water saturation and bulk volume of water. The thickness of the reservoir varies between 127ft and 1620ft. Average porosity values vary between 0.061 and 0.600; generally decreasing with depth. The mean average computed values for the Petrophysical parameters for the reservoirs are: Bulk Volume of Water, 0.070 to 0.175; Apparent Water Resistivity, 0.239 to 7.969; Water Saturation, 0.229 to 0.749; Irreducible Water Saturation, 0.229 to 0.882 and Volume of Shale, 0.045 to 0.355. The findings will also enhance the proper characterization of the reservoir sands.


Author(s):  
A. Coppoli ◽  
B. Ghiggeri ◽  
E. Zardo ◽  
E. d`Huteau ◽  
P. Cabañas and V. Martínez Cal

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 1087-1100
Author(s):  
Yu-Liang Su ◽  
Jin-Gang Fu ◽  
Lei Li ◽  
Wen-Dong Wang ◽  
Atif Zafar ◽  
...  

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (20) ◽  
pp. 5278
Author(s):  
Mianmo Meng ◽  
Yinghao Shen ◽  
Hongkui Ge ◽  
Xiaosong Xu ◽  
Yang Wu

Hydraulic fracturing becomes an essential method to develop tight gas. Under high injection pressure, fracturing fluid entering into the formation will reduce the flow channel. To investigate the influence of water saturation on gas flow behavior, this study conducted the gas relative permeability with water saturation and the flow rate with the pressure gradient at different water saturations. As the two dominant tight gas-bearing intervals, the Upper Paleozoic Taiyuan and Shihezi Formations deposited in Ordos Basin were selected because they are the target layers for holding vast tight gas. Median pore radius in the Taiyuan Formation is higher than the one in the Shihezi Formation, while the most probable seepage pore radius in the Taiyuan Formation is lower than the one in the Shihezi Formation. The average irreducible water saturation is 54.4% in the Taiyuan Formation and 61.6% in the Shihezi Formation, which indicates that the Taiyuan Formation has more movable water. The average critical gas saturation is 80.4% and 69.9% in these two formations, respectively, which indicates that the Shihezi Formation has more movable gas. Both critical gas saturation and irreducible water saturation have a negative relationship with porosity as well as permeability. At the same water saturation, the threshold gradient pressure of the Taiyuan Formation is higher than the one in the Shihezi Formation, which means that water saturation has a great influence on the Taiyuan Formation. Overall, compared with the Shihezi Formation, the Taiyuan Formation has a higher median pore size and movable water saturation, but water saturation has more influence on its gas flow capacity. Our research is conducive to understanding the effect of fracturing fluid filtration on the production of natural gas from tight reservoirs.


2012 ◽  
Vol 226-228 ◽  
pp. 2082-2087
Author(s):  
Chi Guan ◽  
Zhang Hua Lou ◽  
Hai Jian Xie

Mercury intrusion porosimetry injection is important in assessing microscopic pore structure of reservoirs. This paper introduces an estimated function for investigating the pore characteristic of western Sichuan tight gas reservoir based on VG model. Better correlations between the measured and estimated results have been obtained using VG model. Representative parameters were obtained by fitting the predictions of VG model to the experimental data, and then the estimated formulation was proposed for the studied reservoir. Correlation analysis of the parameters of VG model confirms that absolute permeability and irreducible water saturation are important in mercury injection porosimetry. The approach applied in this paper is helpful in investigating tight reservoirs, especially in the common cases when measurement is difficult to carry out, partly because of complicated variability in the field, and partly because measuring is time-consuming and expensive.


1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (06) ◽  
pp. 453-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.S. Al-Saif ◽  
J.E. Cochrane ◽  
H.N. Edmondson ◽  
W.E. Youngblood

AL-SAIF, A.S., ARAMCO ABQAIQ, SAUDI ARABIA COCHRANE, J.E., MEMBER SPE-AIME, ARAMCO, DHAHRAN, SAUDI ARABIA EDMONDSON, H.N., SCHLUMBERGER TECHNICAL SERVICES, PARIS, FRANCE YOUNGBLOOD, W.E., MEMBER SPE-AIME, SCHLUMBERGER OVERSEAS, DHAHRAN, SAUDI ARABIA Abstract The measurement of thermal neutron decay times by means of pulsed neutron tools has become an important reservoir-monitoring technique. In many types of reservoirs, these measurements permit the location of oil remaining behind casing. A requisite condition for the application of this method is knowledge of formation porosity and chloride content. This knowledge usually is derivable from the open-hole logs run before completion of the well. However, when the producing zones are treated with hydrochloric acid, either of these parameters may be changed. This paper presents examples of dual-spacing thermal neutron decay-time logs in Arabia, where prior acidizing bas altered the log response to The prior acidizing bas altered the log response to The point of producing erroneous conclusions unless point of producing erroneous conclusions unless this effect is accounted for. A hypothesis is advanced explaining this phenomenon as the result of either or both the porosity increase created by acidization and the retention of chlorides from the acid by the formation. Although no way has been found to differentiate positively between the two effects, experience indicates that the cumulative effect observed on The decay-time log is permanent during the water-free productive tile of the well. Thus, the recognized production-monitoring technique, known as time-lapse decay-time logging, is still valid and useful providing that The original "reference" decay-time log is run after acidization. This paper investigates various aspects of the problem and details ways in which it has been problem and details ways in which it has been dealt with in practice. Introduction A dramatic acid effect on pulsed neutron decaytime measurements was recognized by the Arabian American Oil Co. (ARAMCO) late in 1973. Before this time, ARAMCO was successful in using periodic decay-time logs to monitor water-saturation changes in nonacidized carbonate reservoirs. During 1973, a number of logs were run in acidized wells in the Arab D reservoir of the Ghawar field for the purpose of detecting sources of water production. Results were confusing at best until a base log recorded in a clean oil producer revealed be acid effect producer revealed be acid effect Extensive inquires were made to shareholder companies, other Arabian Gulf operators, and to Schlumberger. It was found that, although acid effects had been recognized, no correction techniques had been devised. The only guideline given was to disregard water-saturation calculations in acidized formations. Since such calculations were the primary reason for running decay-time logs for monitoring, and most ARAMCO wells were acidized during completion, this guideline apparently left no alternative but to cease decay-time logging in carbonate reservoirs. Since there were no other techniques for water-saturation determination in cased holes, however, A was recognized that a workable solution to this problem had to be found. Early in 1974 a controlled evaluation program was begun to study the acid effect on dual-spacing decay-time measurements. The program considered the following questions. Is be acid effect truly caused by acidization of carbonate reservoirs? Is it a permanent effect, or does it disappear with oil or water production? What is the physical nature of the effect and can it be accounted for in water-saturation calculations? Can the anomalous behavior be used to evaluate the effectiveness of acid treatments? Dual-spacing decay-time logs were obtained in many wells, before and after acid treatments that displayed a variety of characteristics (such as, rates, volumes, concentrations, use of diverting agents, etc.). Also, open-hole porosity and resistivity measurements were obtained before and after treatment to study the effects of acid on other parameters. SPEJ P. 453


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