--> ABSTRACT: Capillary-Pressure Based, Water Saturation Models for Heterogeneous Sandstone Reservoirs, by Wu, Tao, Robert R. Berg; #90026 (2004)
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Wu, Tao1, Robert R. Berg1 
(1) Texas A&M University, College Station, TX

ABSTRACT: Capillary-Pressure Based, Previous HitWaterNext Hit Previous HitSaturationNext Hit Models for Heterogeneous Sandstone Reservoirs

Knowing the Previous HitdistributionNext Hit of Previous HitreservoirNext Hit-fluid saturations is critical to formation evaluation. Capillary pressure data have been widely used to calculate fieldwide Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitsaturationNext Hit and hydrocarbon height relationships from core and log information. Most of the commonly used methods are based on empirical correlations among the following parameters: capillary pressure (or converted to height above free Previous HitwaterNext Hit level), Previous HitwaterNext Hit/hydrocarbon Previous HitsaturationNext Hit (or bulk volume of Previous HitwaterNext Hit/hydrocarbon), porosity, and permeability. One problem is that empirical coefficients have to be adjusted with laboratory measurements from field to field. Furthermore, to be statistically meaningful, a large number of measurements are required. However, laboratory capillary-pressure measurements are usually sparse. In addition, most present techniques work well for homogeneous reservoirs, but are not satisfactory for heterogeneous reservoirs. In this study, several popular Previous HitsaturationNext Hit-height methods have been reviewed. A new capillary-pressure model is proposed. All the parameters of the model can be related to petrophysical properties, such as porosity, permeability, displacement pressure, and irreducible Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitsaturationNext Hit. By dividing a heterogeneous Previous HitreservoirNext Hit into several flow units according to lithology and physical properties, synthetic capillary pressure curves can be generated for each flow unit. A continuous height-Previous HitsaturationNext Hit for the whole Previous HitreservoirNext Hit can then be established, which makes it possible to estimate free Previous HitwaterNext Hit level (FWL), or predict Previous HitsaturationNext Hit in the Previous HitreservoirNext Hit if the FWL is known. Other applications of the model include estimating permeability when Previous HitwaterNext Hit Previous HitsaturationTop is known, and calculating hydrocarbon-in-place.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90026©2004 AAPG Annual Meeting, Dallas, Texas, April 18-21, 2004.