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Content available remote Petrophysical rock typing and permeability prediction in tight sandstone reservoir
EN
In this paper, the low-permeability reservoir was subdivided into several units based on three models; in the first model, porosity, permeability, pore sizes, and shale volume were used as an input in the heterogeneous rock analysis clustering workflow to define rock units; in the second model, rock types were defined using flow zone index. The third flow unit discriminator was proposed by the author; the model is based on relation between porosity, permeability, irreducible water saturation, and pore size distribution. Also, Wyllie–Rose equation for permeability in tight reservoir was core-calibrated, and coefficients e, d, and Kw were established. The reservoir is built of thin layers of sandstones with variable porosity, permeability, pore sizes, and irreducible water. The research was performed in two wells where as input well log data, the laboratory results of mercury injection porosimetry, permeability measurements, and nuclear magnetic resonance data were used. Furthermore, it was investigated whether the presence of fractures identified on XRMI images were strictly related to one flow unit.
EN
Based on the analysis of mercury injection capillary pressure (MICP) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experimental data for core plugs, which were drilled from two Chinese tight sandstone reservoirs, permeability prediction models, such as the classical SDR, Timur– Coates, the Swanson parameter, the Capillary Parachor, the R10 and R35 models, are calibrated to estimating permeabilities from field NMR logs, and the applicabilities of these permeability prediction models are compared. The processing results of several field examples show that the SDR model is unavailable in tight sandstone reservoirs. The Timur– Coates model is effective once the optimal T2cutoff can be acquired to accurately calculate FFI and BVI from field NMR logs. The Swanson parameter model and the Capillary Parachor model are not always available in tight sandstone reservoirs. The R35 based model cannot effectively work in tight sandstone reservoirs, while the R10 based model is optimal in permeability prediction.
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