SELF-COMPENSATED CASED-HOLE PULSED NEUTRON SPECTROSCOPY MEASUREMENTS

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tong Zhou ◽  
◽  
David Rose ◽  
Jeffrey Miles ◽  
Jason Gendur ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ezechukwu Nduka ◽  
Anijekwu Chinedu ◽  
Nwoke Linus ◽  
Oghene Nkonyeasua ◽  
Emeka Ezeike ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Azzan Al-Yaarubi ◽  
Khalsa Al-Hadidi ◽  
Rinat Lukmanov ◽  
Ali Al-Mahrouqi ◽  
Marcel Elie

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Zambrano ◽  
Yevhen Makar ◽  
Michael Sadivnyk ◽  
Andriy Butenko ◽  
Oleksandr Doroshenko ◽  
...  

Abstract The Sakhalin Field is located in the Dnieper-Donets Basin, east of Ukraine, and has been producing 7.7 billion cubic meters of natural gas in place from carboniferous rocks since the 1980s. Notwithstanding, it is strongly believed that significant untapped resources remain in the field, specifically those classified as tight intervals. Advances in wireline logging technology have brought, besides better accuracy on measurements behind the casing, a new measurement called fast neutron cross-section (FNXS), which has proved to be sensitive enough to the volume of gas in low-porosity formations. This enabled a quantitative interpretation for a better understanding of where these additional resources may lie in the Sakhalin Field. The methodology is based on advanced pulsed neutron spectroscopy logs to assess the essential formation properties such as lithology, porosity, and gas saturation and reduce the evaluation uncertainty in potential tight gas intervals. The advanced technology combines measurements from multiple detectors that represent independent formation properties such as formation sigma, thermal neutron porosity, FNXS, and elemental fractions. To address the lithology, the tool measures directly the rock elements required to determine representative mineralogy and matrix properties, which in turn are used to compensate for the matrix effects and obtain a reliable porosity and gas volume estimation. The methodology was tested on the upper Visean productive zones (Mississippian epoch) characterized by its low porosity (<10 pu) and permeability (<10 mD). In the past, those intervals have been overlooked because of inconclusive petrophysical interpretation based on basic openhole logs and their low production in some areas of the field. The necessity to finding new reserves has motivated the re-evaluation of possible bypassed tight-gas intervals by logging of mature wells behind casing in different sectors of the field. Advanced pulsed neutron spectroscopy logging behind casing uniquely identifies reserves in tight-gas intervals where basic open-hole interpretations were ambiguous. The gas production obtained from the perforated intervals supports the formation evaluation parameters estimated from the standalone interpretation of the pulsed neutron data. This work describes in detail the application of the alternative methodology and interpretation workflow to evaluate the formation through the casing. A concrete example is presented to illustrate the effectiveness of this approach in the revealing and development of tight gas reservoirs in mature fields in the Dnieper-Donets Basin.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Ameen ◽  
Eslam Atwa ◽  
Youssif Youssif ◽  
Emad Abdel Hakim ◽  
Mohamed Farouk ◽  
...  

Abstract For more than 40 years, pulsed neutron spectroscopy has been primarily used in reservoir management to determine hydrocarbon saturation profiles, tracking reservoir depletion, and planning workover activities to diagnose production problems such as water influx. Legacy pulsed neutron tools used to provide this information for more than four decades, but they were challenged when a mixed lithology reservoir is encountered, complex completions, unknown borehole conditions, and poor cement integrity in cased boreholes. This paper presents two successful field examples and applications using the advanced slim pulsed neutron spectroscopy to precisely determine multiphase contacts in a complex geological structure, provide current hydrocarbon saturation independent of the quality of cement behind the casing, and identifying bypassed hydrocarbon. This was of paramount importance in understanding current reservoir fluid distribution to reveal the true potential of this offshore brownfield located in the Gulf of Suez, Egypt. An integrated approach and candidate well selection were done that resulted in selecting two candidate wells that had poor cement quality behind casing, heterogeneous carbonate reservoir with mixed lithology, and uncertain fluid contacts in a complex reservoir structure. These combined borehole and reservoir conditions resemble challenges for capturing this crucial information with high confidence using the legacy pulsed neutron tool, and therefore required an advanced technology that can overcome these challenges using a single logging mode at twice the logging speed of any current pulsed neutron technology available in the industry. Based on the results, a workover campaign was implemented in this mature field to increase overall oil production with very efficient cost control, especially with this unprecedented time the O&G industry is going through. An integrated approach was set that resulted in the selection of two wells for the saturation determination logging tool deployment. Detailed high-resolution mineralogy, self-compensated total porosity and sigma, fluid type identification, and multiphase fluid saturation was obtained with high precision behind cased borehole independent of cement integrity and borehole fluid reinvasion. The results provided crucial information as an input to the integrated reservoir engineering approach which revealed around a 100-m net oil interval which was previously overlooked due to relatively low resistivity. Besides, fluids contacts were evaluated that confirmed the development of a secondary gas cap and the water encroachment direction. This technology can be further applied to more brownfields provided the right candidate selection is done to understand the potentiality of the field which would increase the recovery factor of the brownfields that represent almost more than 65% of the oil and gas fields around the world.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khaled Saleh ◽  
Chiara Cavalleri ◽  
Hugo Espinosa ◽  
Mohamed Ghanim ◽  
Mahmoud Galal ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 389-400
Author(s):  
P. V. Sedyshev ◽  
N. V. Simbirtseva ◽  
A. M. Yergashov ◽  
S. T. Mazhen ◽  
Yu. D. Mareev ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas A. Zalan ◽  
Paul C. Henshaw ◽  
Harold P. Abels ◽  
Brian K. Owens ◽  
Dunsati S. Guo ◽  
...  

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