Characterization and Evaluation of Sandstone and Carbonate Reservoirs
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Characterization and Evaluation of Sandstone and Carbonate Reservoirs Course
Introduction:
Carbonate reservoirs are characterized by significant heterogeneity at numerous scales, ranging from exploration to production and enhanced production scale. Understanding of how primary depositional facies, diagenesis, and the sequence stratigraphic framework control the development of pores in carbonate rocks, and how the variation in pore architecture influences reservoir porosity and permeability characteristics is a fundamental step in the accurate reservoir characterization of carbonate units. With the ubiquitous use of geostatistical models to define 3D reservoir architecture, it has become increasingly important to accurately define the probable geometric distribution of potential reservoir facies, fluid barriers, and baffles at multiple scales to help build more accurate geologic models that can then be used to manage and improve reservoir development. To effectively do this, the challenge is to integrate data on the primary depositional environment (facies, probable geometry, and susceptibility to diagenetic modification), the sequence stratigraphic framework, and the petrophysical characteristics of carbonates at multiple scales. This course will review the controls on carbonate reservoir heterogeneity from the pore architecture scale to the geometrical attributes at reservoir-scale and how these parameters can be incorporated and integrated into the development of viable petrophysical-based reservoir models for carbonates. In-class exercises are used to reinforce the potential integration of various data sets to provide students with experience in carbonate reservoir characterization.
Course Objectives:
How To:
- Build on previous experience with carbonate systems to integrate various aspects of carbonate rocks (depositional environment, primary facies and mineralogy, high-resolution sequence stratigraphy, and various Petrophysical characteristics) for improved carbonate reservoir architecture and flow unit characterization
- Apply knowledge of Petrophysical, sedimentological petrologic tools to characterize and evaluate carbonate reservoirs
- Recognize and better understand well log responses in carbonate systems and to learn to utilize data from formation evaluation tools to determine reservoir quality (porosity, permeability, and lithology)
- Identify potential stratigraphic variations in carbonate pore architecture and its effect on permeability
- Better understand the relationship of primary depositional facies, sequence stratigraphic framework, and diagenetic history to pore architecture and reservoir quality
- Better understand fracturing in carbonates, relating fracture density, aperture, length to facies, lithology, and diagenesis
- Distinguish controls on carbonate reservoir heterogeneity, from sub-reservoir to reservoir scale
- Better understand carbonate reservoir heterogeneity and the value of 3D geostatistical model building to better manage the development of carbonate reservoirs
Who Should Attend?
Exploration and development geoscientists, Petrophysicists, reservoir engineers, geostatistical modelers, and research/development staff who want to gain fundamental insight into carbonate reservoir characterization through an integrated geological and petrophysical approach.
Course Outlines:
- Importance of understanding the various scales of heterogeneity in carbonate reservoirs
- Carbonate deposition, diagenesis, mineralogy, rock textures, and pore types
- Carbonate rock and carbonate pore system classification
- Carbonate rock properties and core analysis
- Well log response, limitations, and strengths in carbonates
- Determination of lithology, porosity, and permeability
- Fracture identification and distribution
- Porosity/depth relationships in limestone and dolomite reservoirs
- Importance of sequence boundaries to development of pore architecture
- Variations in carbonate pore architecture and its effect on permeability
- Relationship of primary depositional facies, sequence stratigraphic framework and diagenetic history to pore architecture and reservoir quality
- Controls on reservoir heterogeneity, from sub-reservoir to reservoir scale
- Value of analogs for the development of petrophysical-based reservoir models
- Value and limitations of 3D geostatistical models to understand reservoir heterogeneity and architecture