--> How Does the Pore-Throat Size Control the Reservoir Quality and Oiliness of Tight Sandstones?
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How Does the Previous HitPoreNext Hit-Previous HitThroatNext Hit Size Control the Reservoir Quality and Oiliness of Tight Sandstones?

Abstract

Previous HitPoreNext Hit-Previous HitthroatNext Hit size is a very crucial factor controlling the reservoir quality and oiliness of tight sandstones, which primarily affects rock-properties such as permeability and drainage capillary pressure. However, the wide range of size makes it difficult to understand their distribution characteristics as well as the specific controls on reservoir quality and oiliness. In order to better understand about Previous HitporeNext Hit-Previous HitthroatNext Hit size distribution, petrographic, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), pressure-controlled mercury injection (PMI), rate-controlled mercury injection (RMI), quantitative grain fluorescence (QGF) and environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) investigations under laboratory pressure conditions were performed on a suite of tight reservoir from the fourth member of the Lower Cretaceous Quantou Formation in the southern Songliao Basin, China. The Previous HitporeNext Hit-Previous HitthroatNext Hit Previous HitsizesNext Hit vary from nano- to micro-scale. The PMI technique views the Previous HitporeNext Hit-Previous HitthroatNext Hit size ranging from 0.001 μm to 63 μm and revealed that the Previous HitporeNext Hit-throats with radius larger than 1.0 μm are rare and the Previous HitporeNext Hit-Previous HitthroatNext Hit size distribution curves show evident fluctuations. RMI measurements indicated that the Previous HitporeNext Hit size distribution characteristics of the samples with different porosity and permeability values look similar. The Previous HitthroatNext Hit size and Previous HitporeNext Hit Previous HitthroatNext Hit radius ratio distribution curves had however significant differences. The permeability is mainly contributed by a small part of larger Previous HitporeNext Hit-throats (less than 30%) and the ratio of the smaller Previous HitporeNext Hit-throats in the samples increases with decreasing permeability. Although smaller Previous HitporeNext Hit-throats have negligible contribution on reservoir flow potential, they are very significant for the reservoir storage capacity. The Previous HitporeNext Hit-throats with average radius larger than 1.0 μm mainly exist in reservoirs with permeability higher than 0.1mD. When the permeability is lower than 0.1mD, the sandstones are mainly dominated by Previous HitporeNext Hit-throats with average radius from 0.1 μm to 1.0 μm. We suggest that splitting or organizing key parameters defining permeability systematically into different classes or functions can enhance the ability of formulating predictive models about permeability in tight sandstone reservoirs. The PMI combined with QGF analyses indicate that oil emplacement mainly occurred in the Previous HitporeTop-throats with radius larger than about 0.25–0.3 μm. This result is supported by the remnant oil micro-occurrence evidence observed by SEM and ESEM.