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Abstract

AAPG Bulletin, V. 99, No. 5 (May 2015), PP. 831ndash925

Copyright copy2015. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved.

DOI: 10.1306/01021514145

Factors controlling petroleum accumulation and leakage in overpressured reservoirs

Fang Hao,1 Weilin Zhu,2 Huayao Zou,3 and Pingping Li4

1Key Laboratory of Tectonics and Petroleum Resources, Ministry of Education, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China; State Key Laboratory of Petroleum Resources and Prospecting, China University of Petroleum, Changping, Beijing 102249, China; [email protected]; [email protected]
2China National Offshore Oil Corporation, Beijing 100010, China; [email protected]
3State Key Laboratory of Petroleum Resources and Prospecting, China University of Petroleum, Changping, Beijing 102249, China; [email protected]
4State Key Laboratory of Petroleum Resources and Prospecting, China University of Petroleum, Changping, Beijing 102249, China; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

This paper reviews the hydrocarbon-retaining properties of overpressured reservoirs and discusses the mechanisms for petroleum accumulation, preservation and loss in overpressured reservoirs, and the factors controlling hydrocarbon column heights in overpressured traps. Four types of overpressured traps (filled, underfilled, unfilled, and drained) are recognized. The diversities in petroleum-bearing properties reflect the complexities of petroleum accumulation and leakage in overpressured reservoirs. Forced top seal fracturing, frictional failure along preexisting faults, and capillary leakage are the major mechanisms for petroleum loss from overpressured reservoirs. The hydrocarbon retention capacities of overpressured traps are controlled by three groups of factors: (1) factors related to minimum horizontal stress (tectonic extension or compression, stress regimes, and basin scale and localized pressure–stress coupling); (2) factors related to the magnitudes of water-phase pressure relative to seal fracture pressure (the depth to trap crest, vertical and/or lateral overpressure transfer, mechanisms of overpressure generation); and (3) factors related to the geomechanical properties of top seals or sealing faults (the tensile strength and brittleness of the seals, the natures and structures of fault zones). Commercial petroleum accumulations may be preserved in reservoirs with pressure coefficients greater than 2.0 and pore pressure/vertical stress ratios greater than 0.9 (up to 0.97). The widely quoted assumption that the fracture pressure is 80%–90% of the overburden pressure and hydrofracturing occurs when the pore pressure reaches 85% of the overburden pressure significantly underestimates the maximum sustainable overpressures, and thus, potentially the hydrocarbon-retention capacities, especially in deeply buried traps. Lateral and/or vertical water-phase overpressure transfer from deeper successions plays an important role in the formation of unfilled and drained overpressured traps. Traps in hydrocarbon generation-induced overpressured systems have greater exploration potential than traps in disequilibrium compaction-induced overpressured systems with similar overpressure magnitude.

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