Prediction of mobile water in a tight gas sandstone reservoir using NMR and fractional flow model
Maria Anantawati A and Suryakant Bulgauda ASantos Ltd
The APPEA Journal 54(2) 1-13 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ13005
Published: 2014
Abstract
One of the objectives of petrophysical interpretation is the estimation of the respective volumes of formation fluids. With traditional interpretation using conventional openhole logs it is only possible to determine the total amount of water. The challenge is to determine the volumes of bound water (clay-bound and capillary-bound) and free water. At the moment, NMR is the only measurement that can help distinguish the volumes of each water component (clay-bound, capillary-bound and mobile), using cut-offs on T2 (transverse relaxation time). However NMR interpretation also requires information on reservoir properties. Alternatively, steady-state relative permeability and fractional flow of water can be used to determine the potential of mobile water.
The study area, located in the Cooper Basin, South Australia, is the target of a planned gas development project in the Patchawarra formation. It comprises multiple stacked fluvial sands which are heterogeneous, tight and of low deliverability. The sands are completed with multi-stage pin-point fracturing as a key enabling technology for the area.
A comprehensive set of data, including conventional logs, cores and NMR logs, were acquired. Routine and special core analysis were performed, including NMR, electrical properties, centrifuge capillary pressure, high-pressure mercury injection, and full curve steady state relative permeability. A fractional flow model was built based on core and NMR data to determine potential mobile water and the results compared with production logs.
This paper (SPE 165766) was prepared for presentation at the SPE Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition, held in Jakarta, Indonesia, from 22–24 October 2013.
Maria Anantawati is a staff petrophysicist for Santos, and is based in Adelaide. She is presently working in the Cooper/Eromanga basins. Maria joined Santos in 2006 and has worked for South Madura Basin in Indonesia prior to moving to Australia. She holds a Bachelor of Petroleum Engineering degree from Trisakti University, and a Master of Management degree from the University of Indonesia. Previously she has worked for Maxus-YPF, Conoco and Total E&P in Indonesia. |
Suryakant Bulgauda is manager petrophysics for Santos, and is based in Adelaide. He has more than 25 years’ experience in the field of geology and petrophysics. Suryakant received his Master of Applied Geology degree from the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai. He has worked previously in Oil India Limited, Halliburton and Enron Oil and Gas from 1985–2001. |