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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Special Volumes
Abstract
Guthrie, J., C. Nino, and H. Hassan,
reservoir
temperature history to model fluid properties in the Frade and Roncador fields, Campos Basin, offshore Brazil, in K. E. Peters, D. J. Curry, and M. Kacewicz, eds., Basin Modeling: New Horizons in Research and Applications: AAPG Hedberg Series, no. 4, p.
DOI:10.1306/13311443H43476
2012 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.
Integrating Geochemistry, Charge Rate and Timing, Trap Timing, and
Reservoir
Temperature History to Model Fluid Properties in the Frade and Roncador Fields, Campos Basin, Offshore Brazil
Reservoir
Temperature History to Model Fluid Properties in the Frade and Roncador Fields, Campos Basin, Offshore Brazil
John Guthrie,1 Christian Nino,2 Hassan Hassan3
1Hess Corporation, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
2Hess Corporation, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.
3University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, U.S.A.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank Steve Crews, Pam Morelos, David Schmidt, and Gunardi Sulistyo for their contributions to the various aspects of data compilation, interpretation, and modeling and also for their comments and suggestions to the article. We also thank reviewers Cliff Walters and Eric Michael for their useful comments.
ABSTRACT
Understanding the distribution of oil
quality
and its impact on the development of deep-water reservoirs is a major challenge in many offshore basins of Brazil. Traditional geochemical approaches have used bulk properties (API gravity, viscosity, and sulfur content) and the biomarker compositions of oils to resolve the effects of source rock facies, thermal maturity, and biodegradation on oil
quality
in the present-day
reservoir
. These techniques, however, cannot fully resolve the effects of hydrocarbon charge timing, charge rate, timing of trap formation, and
reservoir
temperature history on the
quality
of the oil. In the Roncador and Frade fields, offshore Brazil, lacustrine-derived oils from Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) and lower Tertiary (Oligocene–Miocene) reservoirs have gravities ranging from 14 to 33 API. In Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) reservoirs of the Roncador field, better
quality
light oil (average, 28 API) occurs in the northeastern part, and mostly heavy oil (average, 17
API) is encountered in the southwestern part. The Frade field to the west of Roncador also contains heavy oil (16–19
API) but in shallower lower Tertiary (Oligocene–Miocene) reservoirs.
Geochemical analyses have identified the depletion of n-alkanes and the presence of 25-norhopanes (demethylated hopanes) in varying proportions in oils from the Frade and Roncador fields of the Campos Basin, offshore Brazil, indicating a complex history of biodegradation and mixing from at least two hydrocarbon charges in the
reservoir
. This study uses both one-dimensional and multisurface thermal models in the area to help determine charge histories for the source rocks and
reservoir
temperature histories for the reservoirs. These results are used to evaluate the effects of charge and
reservoir
temperature histories and biodegradation on the ultimate composition and
quality
of reservoired oils. An interactive biodegradation tool in Trinity software is used to predict the API gravity, and the results are constrained by the geology and the geochemical composition of the present-day fluids in the
reservoir
. Several examples of charge rate and timing, trap timing, and temperature history are presented for parts of the Roncador and Frade fields to illustrate the importance of these factors on controlling the
quality
of oil in the present-day
reservoir
.
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