微震与油气地球化学深度剖面综合评价有效泄油高度

S. Maxwell, R. Brito, G. Ritter, J. Sinclair, A. Leavitt, Faye Liu, Jana Bachleda
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摘要

该研究将微地震水力裂缝作图与地球化学生产剖面相结合,以了解俄克拉何马州STACK区块不同井段的机械地层、裂缝几何形状和有效排液之间的相互作用。微地震监测用于绘制增产过程中水力裂缝系统接触的范围,而高分辨率地球化学分析或“指纹识别”用于评估储层中不同地层的排水情况。微震活动表明,上Meramec井的水力裂缝扩展迅速覆盖整个Meramec层段,并向下延伸至Woodford。相反,从Woodford井开始的微震活动聚集在该层中,并随着时间的推移向上扩展到下Meramec。地球化学剖面与伴生井着陆带的微震深度分布吻合较好。与Meramec上下井的微震水力高度相似,整个Meramec的产量都是一致的,Woodford的采收率也很高。Woodford着陆井生产的是Woodford油,其中一些产油也来自下Meramec,这也与微地震深度一致。研究发现,在同一目标地层的多套井中,这些生产剖面趋势非常一致。将水力裂缝发育图与水力接触带内有效排水的地球化学评估相结合,为储层接触和排水提供了独特的见解。了解水力裂缝高度增长相对于储层排水的力学地层控制是明智决策最佳储层排水酒架配置的关键。
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Evaluation of Effective Drainage Height through Integration of Microseismic and Geochemical Depth Profiling of Produced Hydrocarbons
This study integrates microseismic hydraulic fracture mapping with geochemical production profiling to understand the interaction between mechanical stratigraphy, fracture geometry, and effective drainage for wells landed in different benches of the STACK play in Oklahoma. Microseismic monitoring was used to map the extents of the hydraulic fracture system contacted during stimulation, while high resolution geochemical analysis or ‘fingerprinting’ was used to assess how different formations in the reservoir were draining. Microseismicity showed that hydraulic fracture growth from an Upper Meramec well rapidly cover the entire Meramec interval with some growth downward into the Woodford. Conversely, microseismicity initiating from a Woodford well clustered in that layer and grew upward into the Lower Meramec with time. Geochemical profiling closely matched the microseismic depth distributions for the associated well landing zones. Similar to the microseismic hydraulic heights from both Upper and Lower Meramec wells consistently produced from the entire Meramec, with additional recovery from the Woodford. Woodford landed wells produced Woodford oil with some production also coming from the Lower Meramec, also consistent with the microseismic depths. These production profiling trends were found to be very consistent across multiple sets of wells drilled into the same target formations. Integrating mapping of hydraulic fracture growth with geochemical assessment of the effective drainage within the hydraulically contacted zones provides unique insights into the reservoir contact and drainage. Understanding the mechanical stratigraphic controls on hydraulic fracture height growth relative to the reservoir drainage is key to informed decisions on wine-rack configurations for optimal reservoir drainage.
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