A New Workflow for Improved Resistivity-Based Water Saturation Assessment in Organic-Rich Mudrocks: Application to Haynesville, Eagle Ford, and Woodford Formations

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2023-02-23 DOI:10.2118/214656-pa
Sabyasachi Dash, Artur Posenato Garcia, Zoya Heidari
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Abstract

Summary Reliable fluid saturation assessment in organic-rich mudrocks has been a challenge for the oil and gas industry. The composition and spatial distribution of rock components have a significant impact on electrical resistivity and, thus, on hydrocarbon reserves estimates. Clays are typically considered, in resistivity models, to be distributed in laminated or dispersed forms. Additionally, conventional resistivity models do not incorporate conductive components other than brine. Such assumptions can lead to uncertainty in fluid saturation assessment in organic-rich mudrocks. We introduce a well-log-based workflow that quantitatively assimilates the type and spatial distribution of all conductive components to improve reserves evaluation in organic-rich mudrocks and demonstrate its field application in the Eagle Ford, the Woodford, and the Haynesville formations. The introduced workflow consists of an inversion algorithm to estimate geometry-dependent parameters (depolarization factors or geometric model parameters) and water saturation. Inputs to the inversion algorithms include volume concentrations of minerals, estimated from the multimineral analysis. Other inputs are conductivity of rock components and porosity obtained from laboratory experiments and interpretation of well logs. The petrophysical model considers that brine forms the conductive background to which conductive (e.g., clay, pyrite, and kerogen) and nonconductive (e.g., grains and hydrocarbon) components are incorporated. The assumed/estimated petrophysical properties have an impact on the effective conductivity of the rock and thereby can impact the performance of the new resistivity-based method. We applied the new method to different organic-rich mudrock formations to test the universal nature of the method and its efficacy in organic-rich mudrock reservoirs with varying volumetric concentrations of minerals within the rock. We successfully applied the workflow to four wells in the Eagle Ford, the Woodford, and the Haynesville formations. The formation-by-formation inversion showed a variation in geometric model parameters in different petrophysical zones, resulting in improved water saturation estimates. A comparison of the results obtained from the new workflow against those from the Waxman-Smits and Archie models indicated a relative improvement in saturation estimates of 9.5 and 26.3% in the Eagle Ford formation. Similar improvements were noted in the Woodford and the Haynesville formations as well. The improvement can be enhanced in formations with larger fractions of conductive components. The results confirmed that the new workflow improves the reliability of water saturation estimates in organic-rich mudrocks, which has been a challenge for the oil and gas industry. In contrast to conventional techniques, the new method does not need water saturation obtained from core measurements for calibration efforts. All the parameters in the new workflow are geometry- or physics-based. We verified that formation-based geometric model parameters in the Eagle Ford formation were consistent in both wells, which is promising for calibration-free assessment of water/hydrocarbon saturation in the field-scale domain using electrical resistivity measurements. The new method minimizes the need for expensive and time-consuming core measurements of water saturation, which is a unique contribution of this work. Finally, the new workflow is physics-based and incorporates the volumetric concentration and electrical conductivity of all rock components. This enables the introduced workflow to be applied to different formations with ease for improved assessment of water saturation.
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基于电阻率的富有机质泥岩含水饱和度评价新流程:Haynesville、Eagle Ford和Woodford地层应用
对富有机质泥岩进行可靠的流体饱和度评估一直是油气行业面临的挑战。岩石组分的组成和空间分布对电阻率有重要影响,从而对油气储量估计有重要影响。在电阻率模型中,粘土通常被认为以层状或分散的形式分布。此外,传统的电阻率模型不包括除盐水以外的导电成分。这种假设会导致富有机质泥岩流体饱和度评估的不确定性。我们引入了一种基于测井的工作流程,定量地吸收所有导电成分的类型和空间分布,以提高富有机质泥岩的储量评估,并展示了其在Eagle Ford、Woodford和Haynesville地层的现场应用。所介绍的工作流程包括一种反演算法来估计几何相关参数(去极化因子或几何模型参数)和含水饱和度。反演算法的输入包括从多矿物分析中估计的矿物体积浓度。其他输入是通过实验室实验和测井解释获得的岩石组分的导电性和孔隙度。岩石物理模型认为,盐水形成导电背景,其中导电成分(如粘土、黄铁矿和干酪根)和非导电成分(如颗粒和碳氢化合物)同时存在。假设/估计的岩石物理性质会影响岩石的有效导电性,从而影响基于电阻率的新方法的性能。我们将新方法应用于不同的富有机质泥岩地层,以测试该方法的普遍性及其在岩石中矿物体积浓度不同的富有机质泥岩储层中的有效性。我们成功地将该工作流程应用于Eagle Ford、Woodford和Haynesville地层的四口井。逐层反演表明,不同岩石物性层的几何模型参数存在差异,从而提高了含水饱和度估算值。与Waxman-Smits和Archie模型的结果相比,新工作流程的结果表明,Eagle Ford地层的饱和度估计相对提高了9.5%和26.3%。在伍德福德和海恩斯维尔地层中也发现了类似的改进。在导电成分含量较大的地层中,这种改善效果更明显。结果证实,新的工作流程提高了富有机质泥岩含水饱和度估算的可靠性,这一直是油气行业面临的一个挑战。与传统技术相比,新方法不需要从岩心测量中获得水饱和度来进行校准工作。新工作流中的所有参数都是基于几何或物理的。我们验证了Eagle Ford地层中基于地层的几何模型参数在两口井中是一致的,这有望在现场范围内使用电阻率测量来进行无需校准的水/烃饱和度评估。新方法最大限度地减少了昂贵且耗时的岩心含水饱和度测量,这是这项工作的独特贡献。最后,新的工作流程是基于物理的,并结合了所有岩石成分的体积浓度和电导率。这使得引入的工作流程可以应用于不同的地层,从而可以轻松地改进含水饱和度的评估。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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