Reservoir Characterization of Tight Gas Sandstones

Reservoir Characterization of Tight Gas Sandstones

Author: Ali Kadkhodaie

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2022-08-10

Total Pages: 277

ISBN-13: 0323901816

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Reservoir Characterization of Tight Gas Sandstones: Exploration and Development is essential reading for those working in oil and gas exploration (both in industry and academia) as it contains chapters that help them further understand all aspects of tight gas reservoirs. In this book, experts in industry and academia update readers on new methods of tight gas reservoir modeling and evaluation. As there are very limited published books in the field of tight sandstones, this book will benefit readers by making them familiar with state-of-art methods of tight gas sandstones characterization and evaluation. Features case studies from countries with considerable tight gas sandstones such as the United States, China, Canada and Australia Includes recent developments in sedimentological, petrophysical, reservoir modeling and fracking technologies of tight gas sandstone reservoirs Covers applications for the characterization and evaluation of tight sandstones for the methodologies presented


Unconventional Reservoir Geomechanics

Unconventional Reservoir Geomechanics

Author: Mark D. Zoback

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2019-05-16

Total Pages: 495

ISBN-13: 1107087074

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A comprehensive overview of the key geologic, geomechanical and engineering principles that govern the development of unconventional oil and gas reservoirs. Covering hydrocarbon-bearing formations, horizontal drilling, reservoir seismology and environmental impacts, this is an invaluable resource for geologists, geophysicists and reservoir engineers.


Compressibility of Sandstones

Compressibility of Sandstones

Author: R.W. Zimmerman

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 1990-11-19

Total Pages: 183

ISBN-13: 0080868878

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This book is a comprehensive treatment of the elastic volumetric response of sandstones to variations in stress. The theory and data presented apply to the deformations that occur, for example, due to withdrawal of fluid from a reservoir, or due to the redistribution of stresses caused by the drilling of a borehole. Although the emphasis is on reservoir-type sandstones, results and methods discussed are also applicable to other porous rocks. Part One concerns the effect of stress on deformation and discusses porous rock compressibility coefficients. Elasticity theory is used to derive relationships between the porous rock compressibility coefficients, the porosity, and the mineral grain compressibility. Theoretical bounds on the compressibility coefficients are derived. The concept of effective stress coefficients is examined, as is the integrated form of the stress-strain relationships. Undrained compression and induced pore pressures are treated within the same general framework. Part One is concluded with a brief, elementary introduction to Biot's theory of poroelasticity. All the results in Part One are illustrated and verified with extensive references to published compressibility data. Part Two deals with the relationship between pore structure and compressibility, and presents methods that permit quantitative prediction of the compressibility coefficients. Two- and three-dimensional models of tubular pores, spheroidal pores, and crack-like "grain boundary" voids are analyzed. A critical review is made of various methods that have been proposed to relate the effective elastic moduli (bulk and shear) of a porous material to its pore structure. Methods for extracting pore aspect ratio distributions from stress-strain data or from acoustic measurements are presented, along with applications to actual sandstone data. Part Three is a brief summary of experimental techniques that are used to measure porous rock compressibilities in the laboratory. The information contained in this volume is of interest to petroleum engineers, specifically those involved with reservoir modeling, petroleum geologists, geotechnical engineers, hydrologists and geophysicists.


Pressure-dependent Elastic Properties of Sandstones, with Applications to Seismic Reservoir Characterisation and Monitoring

Pressure-dependent Elastic Properties of Sandstones, with Applications to Seismic Reservoir Characterisation and Monitoring

Author: Matthew John Saul

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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[Truncated abstract] Knowledge of the pressure dependence of rock properties is important for a diverse range of earth science problems, including seismic characterisation and monitoring of subsurface fluid flow processes, common in hydrocarbon, groundwater, and CO2 sequestration reservoirs. This thesis focuses on developing a better understanding of the pressure-dependent elastic properties of unconsolidated and partially consolidated sandstones. The key contribution of this thesis is to improve the prediction and interpretation of pressure-dependent rock properties and their effects in seismic data. A long-standing research problem is that theoretical models of velocity-pressure response often do not match laboratory measurements, and alternately, empirical regressions fit to lab data do not extrapolate accurately to wider pressure ranges since they have little or no underlying physical basis. In this thesis we develop a new model to describe the pressure sensitivity of the bulk and shear moduli for weakely cemented sedimentary rocks. The model incorporates effects of sedimentary compaction and the concept of critical porosity, including a relationship to account for porosity and density change with pressure. We demonstrate a method to estimate the critical porosity constraint at zero effective pressure using grain-size distribution data. The strong physical basis of this model, along with a unique two-stage model parameter fitting process, enables us to predict the elastic properties of unconsolidated sediments at a wide range of pressures, including low effective pressure when only data at higher pressures is available. The model is tested on laboratory measurements for various rock samples and fits well over a wide range of pressures. The new model should have implications for the improved prediction and interpretation of 3D and 4D seismic data, including for pressure prediction, quantitative AVO analysis, seismic reservoir characterisation, and time-lapse fluid-flow monitoring.


Mechanical Properties of Shale Gas Reservoir Rocks, and Its Relation to the In-situ Stress Variation Observed in Shale Gas Reservoirs

Mechanical Properties of Shale Gas Reservoir Rocks, and Its Relation to the In-situ Stress Variation Observed in Shale Gas Reservoirs

Author: Hiroki Sone

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The main focus of this thesis is to study the basic rock mechanical properties of shale gas reservoir rocks, the in-situ state of stress in shale gas reservoirs, and their inter-relation. Laboratory studies on the elastic and deformational mechanical properties of gas shales show that these rocks exhibit wide range of mechanical properties and significant anisotropy reflecting their wide range of material composition and fabric anisotropy. The elastic properties of these shale rocks are successfully described by tracking the relative amount soft components (clay and solid organic materials) in the rock and also acknowledging the anisotropic distribution of the soft components. Gas shales were also found to possess relatively stronger degree of anisotropy compared to other organic-rich shales studied in the literature, possibly due to the fact that these rocks come from peak-maturity source rocks. The deformational properties studied by observing the ductile creep behavior and brittle strengths were also found to be influenced by the amount of soft components in the rock and exhibited mechanical anisotropy. A strong correlation between the elastic properties and the deformational properties was also found through comparison of laboratory data. The relation between the elastic modulus and magnitude of ductile creep is investigated through differential effective medium (DEM) modeling of the shale elastic properties. The partitioning of the far-field stress between the stiff and soft components was calculated in the DEM modeling to forward model the ductile creep behavior of the shales. Results showed that the correlation between the elastic properties and magnitude of ductile creep arises because they are both influenced by the stress partitioning in the rocks. Examination of a FMI image log from a vertical well in Barnett shale showed that the in-situ state of stress fluctuates rapidly within the reservoir in terms of the orientation and magnitude of the principal stress. The appearance and disappearance of drilling-induced tensile fractures roughly correlated with the variation in the clay and organic content in the formation, suggesting that there is a fluctuation in the magnitude of the horizontal stress difference, on the order of 10 MPa, that may be controlled by the mechanical heterogeneity of the formations. In order to explain the linkage between the observed stress variation and formation heterogeneity, we focused on the variation of ductile creep behavior exhibited by the gas shale rocks observed in the laboratory. The laboratory creep data was analyzed under the framework of viscoelastic theory to quantify its behavior and allow the calculation of the stress carrying capacity of the rocks. The viscoelastic behavior of the gas shales were found to be best approximated by a power-law function of time and the accumulation of differential stress over geological time in these rocks were calculated according to this constitutive description. Stress analysis assuming a simple constant strain rate tectonic loading history over 150 Ma shows that the horizontal stress difference on the order of 10 MPa observed in the Barnett shale can be explained by the variation in viscoelastic properties within the Barnett shale. Our results highlight the importance of acknowledging viscous deformation of shale gas reservoir rocks to understand the current in-situ state of stress in these reservoirs. A study of frictional properties of a saponite-rich fault gouge from a serpentinite-bearing fault in central Japan is also presented in this thesis. Field characterization of the internal structure of a fault juxtaposing serpentinites and Cretaceous sedimentary rocks show that hydrothermal metasomatic reactions took place at the fault interface which produced peculiar mineral assemblages along the fault plane. The saponite-rich fault gouge resulting from the metasomatic reaction exhibits extremely low coefficient of friction, ~0.1, at wet conditions and strong velocity-strengthening characteristics. The study highlights the importance of geochemical reactions along fault planes which may ultimately control the overall mechanical behavior of major fault zones.


Experimental Mechanics of Fractured Porous Rocks

Experimental Mechanics of Fractured Porous Rocks

Author: Daniel Cabrera S.

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2022-11-21

Total Pages: 67

ISBN-13: 303117738X

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The book offers novel petrophysical methods for obtaining and characterizing physical properties of sandstone and fractured carbonate rocks. The proposed experimental petrophysical test for the determination of permeability tensor ellipses in fractured rocks at a laboratory scale is a methodology of easy application and does not require complicated equipment. Such a test can be extended with 3D digital petrophysics. The estimation of principal permeability directions is useful in the realization of immiscible or miscible displacements in the rock. This book is of interest for professionals and researchers in the field of petrophysics and oil and gas exploration.


Sand and Sandstone

Sand and Sandstone

Author: F. J. Pettijohn

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 560

ISBN-13: 1461210666

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The first edition appeared fourteen years ago. Since then there have been significant advances in our science that warrant an updating and revision of Sand and Sandstone. The main framework of the first edition has been retained so that the reader can begin with the mineralogy and textural properties of sands and sandstones, progress through their organization and classification and their study as a body of rock, to consideration of their origin-prove nance, transportation, deposition, and lithification-and finally to their place in the stratigraphic column and the basin. The last decade has seen the rise of facies analysis based on a closer look at the stratigraphic record and the recognition of characteristic bed ding sequences that are the signatures of some geologic process-such as a prograding shallow-water delta or the migration of a point bar on an alluvial floodplain. The environment of sand deposition is more closely determined by its place in such depositional systems than by criteria based on textural characteristics-the "fingerprint" approach. Our revi sion reflects this change in thinking. As in the geological sciences as a whole, the concept of plate tectonics has required a rethinking of our older ideas about the origin and accumu lation of sediments-especially the nature of the sedimentary basins.