01 General Intro To Reservoir
01 General Intro To Reservoir
01 General Intro To Reservoir
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
TO RESERVOIR
For graduated program
Tran Van Xuan
HoChiMinh City University of Technology
2016
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Reservoir Characterization
General to reservoir
Fundamental physical properties of a
reservoir
Primary factors controlling porosity &
permeability
Atypical Reservoirs Rocks
Reservoir Characterization
Instructional Objectives
Define reservoir characterization
List the different areas that may be involved in
reservoir characterization
List the different sources of data that may be
used in a full reservoir characterization project
Explain the importance of reservoir
characterization
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Intro Reservoir
Reservoir Characterization
Definitions
Reservoir Characterization encompasses all techniques and
methods that:
Reservoir Characterization
Definitions
Reservoir Characterization
Some Facts
More than 75% of current additions to the worlds oil
reserves comes from better management of existing
reservoirs.
Profitability depends on increasing recovery from
producing fields
Reservoir Characterization is the key to Reservoir
Management
Multidisciplinary Teams are the key to Reservoir
Characterization
Reservoir Characterization
Key issues
The general problem facing the Reservoir Team is the
blank area between the wells. Accurately simulating field
performance requires knowing the petrophysical
properties throughout the reservoir.
Sparse wells provides a majority of the hard information,
but may occupy only 1-billionth of the total reservoir
volume.
Seismic data provides interwell details, but vertical
resolution is still somewhat limiting.
Reservoir Characterization
Key questions
What does the reservoir look like?
Whats is the external geometry?
Whats the continuity of pore spaces and fluids.
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Reservoir Characterization
Key questions
How should the wells be perforated and completed?
Will water or/and gas injection be needed and when?
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Reservoir Characterization
What Is It?
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Intro Reservoir
Reservoir Characterization
How do we do it?
The tools and techniques used in reservoir
characterization range from a simple analogy
to a fully integrated approach that combines
information and interpretations from different
sources.
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Intro Reservoir
Geophysical data
Geological information
Well log (open and cased hole) and core data
Pressure and production measurements
Fluid laboratory tests
Geophysical,
Geological,
Geostatistical,
Open and cased hole logging interpretations techniques,
Pressure transient analysis (PTA),
Production data analysis, and
Reservoir simulation.
Reservoir Characterization
Why Do We Do It?
We perform reservoir characterization to
understand the reservoir (or wells) problems
and identify the reservoir (or wells) potential
We can then take actions to economically
increase both the production and the reserves
of the reservoir.
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Intro Reservoir
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Intro Reservoir
Intro Reservoir
Exercise 1
List five different sources of data we use to
help characterize the reservoir
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
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Intro Reservoir
?
19
Its perfect!
The Reservoir
Engineer
The Geologist
The Same Geologist
4850
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Reservoir Characterization
Economic Importance
1992)
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Reservoir Characterization
Economic Importance
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GENERAL INTRODUCTION
TO RESERVOIR
RESERVOIR DEFINITIONS
A single continuous deposit of gas and/or
oil in the pores of a reservoir rock. A
reservoir has a single pressure system and
dont communicate with other reservoirs.
The portion of the trap that contains
petroleum, including the reservoir rock,
pores, and fluids.
(A pond, lake or environment that is used store
liquids).
reservoir rocks
An outcrop of pebbly sandstone (at base of cliff) overlain by red sandstone. The
Budleigh-Salterton pebble beds, of Triassic age. A few kilometres to the east
these beds dip into the subsurface, and form part of the oil reservoir at the
Wytch Farm Field, which is Britains largest onshore oil field.
Physical characteristics of a
reservoir
Physical characteristics of a reservoir
include original deposition and
subsequent changes, the type of
reservoir, sandstone or carbonate, which
was discussed previously, depth, area,
thickness, porosity, permeability, and
capillary pressure.
1. Depth
Shallow reservoir: Created by the folding of relatively
thick, moderately compacted reservoir rock with
accumulation under an anticline or some trap. The
hydrocarbons would generally be better separated as a
result of lower internal reservoir pressures, less gas in
solution and oil of increased viscosity, resulting from lower
temperatures.
Deep reservoir: Typically created by severe faulting.
The hydrocarbons would be less separated with more
gas in solution and oil of reduced viscosity because of
higher temperatures. There is often a reduction in porosity
and permeability due to increased compaction.
Fundamental physical
properties of a reservoir
RESERVOIR (cont.)
There are two fundamental physical
properties that a good reservoir must have:
+ Porosity: sufficient void space contain
significant petroleum.
+ Permeability: the ability of petroleum
to flow into, or out of these voids.
The common rock types that have favorable
combination of porosity and permeability to
be
reservoirs
are
sandstones
and
carbonates.
POROSITY
Porosity is the percentage of volume of voids
to the total volume of rock. It has the symbol
: 0 1 (or 0% 100%)
Effective porosity: the amount of internal space
or voids that is interconnected, and so able to
transmit fluids.
Non-effective porosity: isolated pores and
pores volume occupied by adsorbed water.
Almost all
reservoirs have
porosities in a
range of five to
thirty percent
Figure 2:
The frequency of oil and gas reservoirs plotted against porosity.
CLASSIFIED POROSITY
There are three main types of porosity (based
on Hydraulic properties):
+ Interconnected porosity has multiple pore
throat passages to connect neighboring pore.
+ Connected porosity has only one pore throat
passages connecting with another pore space.
+ Isolated porosity has no connection between
pore.
Interconnected and connected pore contribute
effective porosity because hydrocarbon can
move out from them.
Interconnected porosity
Connected porosity
Isolated porosity
Moldic porosity
Primary Porosity
Primary porosity is divisible into two types:
intergranular or interparticle porosity,
which occurs between the grains of a
sediment ( Figure 1) and intragranular or
intraparticle porosity,
Intergranular porosity
Intragranular porosity
Secondary Porosity
Secondary porosity is porosity formed within
a reservoir after deposition. The major types
of secondary porosity are:
Fenestral;
Intercrystalline;
Solution (moldic and vuggy);
Fracture.
Fenestral porosity
Fracture porosity
Fractured reservoirs can occur in any brittle rock
that breaks by fracturing rather than by plastic
deformation. Thus, there are fractured reservoirs
in shales, hard-cemented quartzitic sandstones,
limestones, dolomites and, of course, basement
rocks such as granites and metamorphics.
from
Figure 3
(percent)
Qualitative evaluation
05
Negligible
5 10
poor
10 15
fair
15 20
good
> 20
very good
PERMEABILITY
Permeability is the property of a medium of
allowing fluids to pass through it without
change in the structure of the medium or
displacement of its parts.
Permeability is related to porosity but not
always dependent upon its.
It is controlled by the size of the connecting
passages (pore throats or capillaries) between
pores.
It is measured in darcies or millidarcies.
Q In
Q Out
k * ( P1 P 2) * A
Q
*L
Where:
Q: Flow rate
K: Permeability
(P1-P2): Pressure drop across
A: Cross-section area of sample
: Viscosity of fluid
L: Length of the sample
Due to flow rate depends on the Ratio of K to , so in
term of commercial rates: Gas ????
CLASSIFIED PERMEABILITY
Absolute permeability is a measure of the
ease (permeability) in which a single fluid can
flow through the pores of the rock when it is
100% saturated with that fluid.
Effective permeability refer to the presence
of two fluids in a rock, and is the ability of the
rock to transmit a fluid in the presence of
another fluid when the two fluids are
immiscible .
Relative permeability is ratio of Effective
permeability & Absolute permeability.
1.0 15
15 50
50 100
100 1000
> 1000
Poor to fair
Moderate
Good
Very good
Excellent
PRIMARY FACTORS
CONTROLLING POROSITY &
PERMEABILITY
GRAIN SIZE
GRAIN SORTING
ROCK FABRIC
Grain Size
Porosity is independent of grain size.
Permeability, however, is very different. All
other things being equal, finer grain sizes of
sediment mean lower permeabilities. This is
because the finer the grain size, the
narrower the throat passages between pore
spaces and, therefore, the harder it is for
fluids to move through a rock. Therefore,
permeability declines with decreasing grain
size.
Grain Sorting
Figure 6:
The effect of sorting on porosity and permeability:
the better sorted the sand, the higher are both the
porosity and permeability.
Rock Fabric
EFFECT DIAGENESIS
ON SANDSTONE RESERVOIR
SANDSTONE BURIAL
In general, sandstone lose porosity with burial
at various rates according to several factors:
The chemical composition of a sand is one
of controlling factors on its overall rates of
porosity loss.
The geothermal gradient: the higher the
geothermal gradient, the greater the rate of
porosity reduction with depth.
Overpressure can help to preserve porosity
at great depth.
SANDSTONE CEMENTATION
SANDSTONE CEMENTATION
Many other types of
cement are found in
sandstone reservoirs,
especially calcite and the
clay minerals.
Figure 09 is a sketch of a
thin section of a sandstone
showing porosity having
been totally destroyed by a
cement of large calcite
crystals.
Figure 10 is a sketch of a
sandstone with interstitial
kaolin crystals.
These generally occur with
a chunky euhedral habit. As
you can see, these kaolin
crystals occupy pore space,
but they do not significantly
affect the permeability of
the rock
Figure 11 is a sketch of a
sandstone with illite in the pore
spaces.
Authigenic
illite
generally
occurs as long thin angular
crystals which radiate from the
quartz grains on which they
grow.
Thus, a small amount of illite
may affect the permeability to a
very large extent by bridging
over and blocking the throat
passages between the pores.
Figure 12
20-30
Figure 13
EFFECT DIAGENESIS
ON CARBONATE RESERVOIR
Limestones
Two types of
secondary solution
pores: moldic and
vuggy, as shown in
the previous
diagram
Dolomites
A secondary dolomite,
showing that the
intercrystalline pores
are large and often
interconnected.
Figure 15
Fig 17:
Paleotecto
nic sections
along
White
TigerNorthern
Eastern
Dragon
structures
Reservoir Continuity
Most oil fields do not occur in single sheetshaped reservoirs of great lateral continuity with
uniform porosity and permeability distributions.
Most oil accumulations occur in
heterogeneous reservoirs with permeability
barriers because of shale breaks or local
cemented zones.
Cross-Sectional Continuity
Reservoir continuity in cross-section is an important consideration in
determining reservoir quality (Harris and Hewitt, 1977). Figure 27 ,
Figure 27
If the sand body with lateral continuity, shown in Figure 28a , were
deformed structurally, oil entrapment would become structural rather
than stratigraphic
Figure 29
Figure 30
RESERVOIR DRIVE
Reservoir drive is the natural energy in a
reservoir that forces the fluids out of the rock
and into the well.
Every oil field has at least one reservoir
drive.
Type of reservoir drives in oil field include:
Now:
1. Fluid Extension drive
2. Gas-cap drive
3. Water drive
4. Compaction drive
5. Combination drive
Exercise 2
1. The main petrophysical properties of reservoir
2. The factors effect to those properties
3. The methods to determine the petrophysical
properties
4. Role and meaning of petrophysical properties
Exercise 3