AAPG Methods in Exploration No. 13, Chapter 7: Application
of Saturation-height Functions in Integrated Reservoir Description, by Paul F. Worthington,
Pages 75 - 89
from:
AAPG Methods in Exploration No. 13: Geological Applications of Well Logs, Edited
by M. Lovell and N. Parkinson
Copyright © 2002 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights
reserved.
Chapter 7
Application of Saturation-height Functions in Integrated Reservoir Description
Paul F. Worthington
Gaffney, Cline & Associates
Alton, Hampshire, U.K.
ABSTRACT
In many integrated field studies, a single reservoir-zonation scheme is not meaningful
for all deterministic interpretative applications. These cases require that the concept of
reservoir partitioning should evolve to become fit for purpose. Thus, a stratigraphic
zonation is used solely for correlation and volumetrics, whereas a petrophysical
separation is applied exclusively in core and log analysis for reservoir properties, after
which the petrophysical partitioning can be discarded. In such a case, in which the
stratigraphic zonation and petrophysical separation do not naturally correspond, the
adoption of fit-for-purpose reservoir-partitioning schemes allows saturation-height
functions to be much more sharply defined because they are then related to units of fairly
uniform physical character. The resulting values of water saturation are subsequently
assigned to the stratigraphic zones, using a straightforward petrophysical combining
algorithm in which a key parameter is bulk volume water. The nature of the combining
equation therefore indicates that the optimum form of saturation-height function should
include bulk volume water as predicted variable in reservoirs that require dual
partitioning. Such an approach has general application in deterministic studies of
water-wet siliciclastic reservoirs. The principal benefit is the controlled reduction of
uncertainty in reservoir evaluation.