WHITE, JENNIFER L., Colorado School of Mines, Dept. of Geology, Golden, CO
ABSTRACT:
3-D
Geologic Model of Permeability in a Deep-Water Sandstone, East Brae
Field, North Sea
The purpose of this thesis is to predict cementation and permeability
distribution in
3-D
based on the relationship between quartz overgrowths and permeability.
Empirical relationships exist to link quartz overgrowth cement volumes, capillary pressure
data, and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) responses to permeability. In order to test the
relationship, NMR analyses will be performed to quantify pore-body size distributions.
Capillary pressure tests will quantify pore-throat size distributions on the same samples
used in a preceding study that quantified quartz cementation for the East Brae field. A
neural network will be used to predict permeabilities in the uncored wells. A
3-D
geologic
model will then be built using Earth Vision software (Dynamic Graphics Inc.). The model
will include log porosity, core analysis permeability, quartz cement volumes, stylolite
abundances, paleo oil-water contacts and mapped horizons and fault surfaces from
3-D
seismic data. Assuming there is a relationship between permeability and quartz overgrowth
cement volumes, I should be able to predict the field wide distribution of quartz cement
in
3-D
, which will lead to a field-wide permeability model.
This thesis includes research directly related to formation evaluation and
characterization of a structurally complex reservoir. If the relationship between quartz
cement overgrowths and permeability exists, there would be justification for running NMR
logging tools in similar sandstone reservoirs. The
3-D
geologic model would provide
possibilities for further development of this field, perhaps using infill or horizontal
wells. The model could also be input into a reservoir simulator for further production
modeling.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90909©2000 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid