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Houston Geological Society Bulletin

Abstract


Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 51, No. 08, April, 2009. Page 24-24.

Abstract: Locating Remaining Oil in Carbonate Reservoirs: The Previous HitReservoirNext Hit Previous HitCharacterizationNext Hit Problem

F. Jerry Lucia
Senior Research Scientist, Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin

Only a small percentage of original oil in place (OOIP) is produced during primary production from most carbonate reservoirs. Secondary recovery programs, such as waterflooding, commonly double the amount of oil recovered, but much of the OOIP remains in the Previous HitreservoirNext Hit. To effectively improve recovery, development programs must target the location of remaining oil. The Previous HitreservoirNext Hit Previous HitcharacterizationNext Hit challenge requires building a model that images remaining oil saturation and can be used to predict the outcome of various development (i.e., secondary recovery) programs.

Building a carbonate Previous HitreservoirNext Hit model begins with an understanding of the relationship between pore space and petrophysical properties. This relationship must be linked to depositional and diagenetic models so that the petrophysical properties can be imaged in 3D space. One rock fabric method for making this link has been developed at the Bureau of Economic Geology by an integrated team of geologists, petrophysicists, and Previous HitreservoirNext Hit engineers. Pore-size distribution is the key link between petrophysical measurements and rock fabric descriptions, and rock fabric is the key link to sequence stratigraphic models.

Rock fabrics are composed of matrix fabrics—which contain interparticle and separate-vug porosity—and nonmatrix fabrics—which contain interconnected vugs. How a Previous HitreservoirNext Hit performs during production will be related to the volume and distribution of these basic fabrics. To properly anaylze a Previous HitreservoirNext Hit with matrix fabrics, understanding its sequence stratigraphic framework is crucial. The primary stratigraphic element is the high-frequency cycle within which basic rock fabrics are systematically distributed. However, the primary petrophysical element is the rock-fabric Previous HitflowNext Hit unit, which is defined by facies stacking within a high-frequency cycle. The result is a static 3D model of porosity, permeability, and initial oil saturation suitable for input into a numerical Previous HitflowTop simulator. Production history of the field is simulated, and the end result is an image of the location of remaining oil saturation.

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