MAGLIO-JOHNSON, TINA, Colorado School of Mines, Petroleum Engineering Department, Golden, CO
ABSTRACT: Petrophysical Definition of Flow Units in a Deep-Water Sandstone, Lewis Shale, Wyoming
Rock and well log data are available from a research well located in Carbon County, Wyoming. The interval of interest contains deep-water sandstones of the Cretaceous Lewis Shale. Part of this study involves the actual drilling of this shallow research well which was 1700 ft deep.
The objective of this study is to define petrophysically based flow units in the
deep-water sands. The entire interval was logged and 580 ft of core was taken from the
well. The flow unit designation method that will be used for this research revolves around
creation of a Stratigraphic Modified Lorenz Plot and an R35 vs. depth plot. The
Stratigraphic Modified Lorenz Plot is a plot of cumulative flow capacity (kh) vs.
cumulative storage capacity fh). Porosity and permeability have
been measured on 150 core plugs and these results will be used to create a neural network
of continuous permeability.
Capillary
pressure
tests will be done on a selected number of
core plugs. The R35 value is a measure of the pore throat radius at 35% saturation of the
wetting phase obtained from these mercury
capillary
pressure
measurements. R35 will be
predicted for the entire logged interval using the Modified Winland Equation which relates
porosity, permeability and R35. R35 can also be plotted against depth as an alternative
method for the delineation of the flow units.
The final output of this research will be a flow-unit zonation based upon the Stratigraphic Modified Lorenz Plot and R35 values. This will provide input into reservoir simulation studies.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90909©2000 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid