--> Turning Rocks Into Oil: Understanding Fluid GOR and API Without Any Fluid
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AAPG Hedberg Conference, The Evolution of Petroleum Systems Analysis

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Turning Rocks Into Oil: Understanding Previous HitFluidNext Hit GOR and API Without Any Previous HitFluidNext Hit

Abstract

From an exploration or development step‐out perspective, Black Oil (GOR ~200 – 1,750) and Volatile Oil (GOR ~ 1,750 – 4,000) are often the more profitable unconventional play objectives. In the past, we have relied primarily on thermal maturation proxies to constrain our Previous HitfluidNext Hit windows during basin evaluation when we don’t have Previous HitfluidNext Hit information. Because all source rock kerogen conversion kinetics differ to some degree, thermal maturation provides a rough, but useful guide to the type of Previous HitfluidNext Hit generated. Ideally, one would like to have Previous HitfluidNext Hit PVT data to build an equation of state model, and thus map Previous HitfluidNext Hit properties over a frontier basin, but such data only exists in areas that have already been drilled or developed. It is typically not available when exploring frontier or under‐explored basins / sub‐ basins. We have leveraged PVT data collected from numerous unconventional source rock plays and found strong relationships between Previous HitfluidNext Hit composition GORsat. Moreover, there are strong relationships between GORsat and saturation pressure, oil viscosity, formation volume Previous HitfactorNext Hit at Psat, and oil API gravity. Therefore, if one could develop a means of estimating GORsat from source rock, we would be able to estimate Previous HitfluidNext Hit composition and develop an analogous equation of state to map Previous HitfluidNext Hit properties across unconventional target areas of interest. We report here a means estimating Previous HitfluidNext Hit GORsat when we have no Previous HitfluidNext Hit, from rocks, via extracted rock pyrolysis gas chromatography. The methodology was validated using both core and cuttings source rock pyrolytic data from the same wells, or from wells adjacent to, the PVT Previous HitfluidNext Hit wells in our PVT database. As noted, the PVT database shows strong relationships between GORsat and some compositional ratios. Page 1 of 2 We can use the same compositional ratio data generated from rocks via pyrolysis GC to build a relationship that mimics the PVT database relationship to estimate GORsat without having any Previous HitfluidNext Hit. The resulting Previous HitfluidNext Hit‐type estimation can be tied to other independent data from rocks alone, such as kerogen kinetic maturation assessments. We will show examples of the technique’s validation and application. The key take‐aways are: 1. We can determine Previous HitfluidNext Hit type, without Previous HitfluidNext Hit, from solvent extracted source rock 2. This assists us in mapping Previous HitfluidNext Hit types where no produced Previous HitfluidTop data are available