--> Abstract: Object Based Modeling and Stochastic Simulation of Fluvial Reservoirs Geometry, by C. A. Poletto, W. L. Lanzarini, and G. Tavares; #90933 (1998).
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Abstract: Object Based Previous HitModelingNext Hit and Stochastic Previous HitSimulationNext Hit of Fluvial Reservoirs Geometry

Poletto, Carlos A. - Petrobras/E&P; Lanzarini, Wilson L. - Petrobras/Cenpes; Tavares, Geovan - Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro

Reliable 3-D simulations of fluvial reservoirs were performed using an object-based method through a stochastic Previous HitmodelingNext Hit technique of geometric objects. The basic unit of a Previous HitreservoirNext Hit is represented in cross-section by the geometry of a semi-elliptical surface. The use of parametric and implicit representations of semi-elliptical surfaces makes the algorithm efficient to generate and visualize objects.

The functions which define a fluvial channel into a 3-D domain were constructed using Previous HitreservoirNext Hit data from the Açu Formation (Potiguar Basin, Brazil), well known not only in many oil fields, as well as in near surface outcrops. The main parameters were thickness (h), width (w), sinuosity (s) and preferential direction (d). The thickness was taken from single reservoirs, defined as fining-upward successions in cores and geologic cross-sections. Sinuosity and channels preferential direction were measured on geologic maps. In addition, a proportion curve controls the Previous HitreservoirNext Hit distribution within the simulated domain.

The Previous HitsimulationNext Hit process of each object starts from a random germ into a defined 3-D domain, with random values for the respective functions and ends when all conditioning wells are honored and the Previous HitreservoirNext Hit proportion is reached. The accepted objects are built by discrete geometric Previous HitmodelingNext Hit of the surfaces. The equiprobable architecture of the Previous HitreservoirNext Hit in three dimensions is the result of erosion and stacking pattern of the generated objects. (Fig. 1).

Simulations of Previous HitreservoirNext Hit geometry and architecture were taken into volume of a developed field, having 1632 x 1632 x 34 meters, totaling 106 cells, and using real data from 30 wells. The realizations are equiprobable and suitable to all conditioning data. Only the Previous HitreservoirNext Hit distributions were simulated. The voids were assumed as non-Previous HitreservoirTop facies. (Fig. 2).

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90933©1998 ABGP/AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil