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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 34, No. 1, September 1991. Pages 13-13.

Abstract: Petrophysical Properties of Seals

By

Previous HitRobertTop M. Sneider

Seals are defined as generally ductile rocks with a very high capillary entry pressure which can dam up hydrocarbons. Petrophysical and petrographic studies of conventional and sidewall cores from known seal-reservoir couplets of hydrocarbon-producing reservoirs provide a basis to quantify the capacity of a rock to trap a hydrocarbon column. The most important property of a seal is its pore size distribution as measured in thin section, scanning electron microscope and very high pressure (up to 50,000 psi) air-mercury capillary pressure curves determined across bedding surfaces in vertical plugs.

Seal quality or capacity is determined by pore-size distribution and interconnection, and ductility. Using the density difference of normal saline water and 35° API gravity oil as a standard, an arbitrary scale of seal types is defined:

SEAL TYPES
35° API Oil Column Held

 

  METERS   FEET
TYPE A

>300

 

>1000

TYPE B >150                  <300   >500                          <1000
TYPE C >30                    <150   >100                            <500
TYPE D >15                      <30   >50                              <100
TYPE E

<15

 

<50

TYPE F WASTE ZONE ROCKS

Comparators of known seal types composed of samples of the rock type, SEM photographs and capillary pressure curve are used to estimate seal type under a binocular microscope at 50X magnification. A catalogue of petrophysical properties and photomicrographs allows one to make reliable estimates of seal capacity of unknown samples in cores and cuttings with a binocular microscope.

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