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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Special Volumes

Abstract


AAPG Memoir 69: Reservoir Quality Previous HitPredictionNext Hit in Sandstones and Carbonates, 1997
Edited by J. A. Kupecz, J. Gluyas, and S. Bloch
Pages 103-114

Detecting Previous HitPermeabilityNext Hit Gradients in Previous HitSandstoneNext Hit Complexes--Quantifying the Effect of Diagenesis on Fabric

Robert Ehrlich, Mark C. Bowers, Virginia L. Riggert, Christopher M. Prince

ABSTRACT

Matrix Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit, the Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit associated with measurements on small samples, is controlled by depositional fabric and diagenesis. Previous HitPredictionNext Hit of matrix Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit requires: (1) specification of a fabric, (2) specification of the diagenetic state, and (3) a means to assess both factors in a sample set taken Previous HitfromNext Hit a target basin. The data Previous HitfromNext Hit the sample set can be used to extrapolate or interpolate within the basin or may be used to calibrate fabric response to basin history data (e.g., thermal history). The effects of fabric and diagenesis on the sample set can be determined using a combination of image analysis data and mercury porosimetry data.

Strong correlations exist between Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit and grain size of unconsolidated sands and gravels, with Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit increasing exponentially with increasing grain size. Previous HitPermeabilityNext Hit in clastic fabrics is controlled by networks of packing flaws, characterized by large pores connected by large pore throats. Such circuits comprise only a fraction of the porosity and represent the effective flow component of porosity. Diagenesis usually brings about Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit reduction, but preferentially affects the grains in close-packed arrangements that separate the networks of packing flaws. A methodology

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has been developed over the past decade that quantifies thin-section-based data precisely enough to estimate the effects of grain size and diagenesis on the rock fabric with respect to flow properties. Such rock physics data are necessary for Previous HitpermeabilityNext Hit Previous HitpredictionNext Hit as a function of basin position.


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